After the harvest…
After the earliest harvest on record, brought about by the warm summer, the last grapes of 2025 were picked here at Three Choirs Vineyard on 9th October.
The harvest is the biggest and most important event every year on the vineyard calendar. And the key thing for us is the quality of fruit, rather than the quantity.
Thomas Shaw, managing director of Three Choirs Vineyard, said: “If we have a lot of fruit, we generally don’t get such good quality. This year we’ve got very good quality grapes!
“It’s not such a good year for making sparkling wines because the acidity in the grapes was low due to the high temperatures, but 2025 is an excellent year for making still wines.”
Now the grapes have all been picked and pressed, they are in tanks in the winery and fermentation is taking place.
By the end of November or early December, fermentation should be complete, and the winemakers will start to taste the individual tanks and decide how that wine is going to be used – whether it is going to be a blend or a single variety. Those decisions will be made before Christmas this year, rather than afterwards, as is often the case.

But how do they make that decision?
Thomas continued: “A lot will be to do with the flavour. The winemakers taste the juice and decide if it’s got the right characteristics for a single variety.”
It is a myth that single variety wines are the ‘best’.
Thomas said: “Some of the highest quality wines in the world are blends. Bordeaux wines are seen as the best and they are all blends. Blending creates a consistency in style.
“Some people think a single variety is the best. But it’s actually a modern, new world thing to have a single variety.
“There are no right and wrong answers. The best wine is the one the drinker thinks is the best. And a bad wine is one that is faulty and badly made, not one you don’t like!”
Once we’ve made the decision on whether the wine will be a blend or single variety – is it better for it to stay in the tank, and mature and age in there? If the wine stays in the tank, we know the whole tank will have a consistent taste. #
When we put the wine in the bottle and seal it, the wine will continue to evolve in the bottle, as each bottle is its own little microcosm.
Opinions differ on the best time to transfer wine from the tank to the bottle, but Thomas believes in leaving it in the tank for as long as possible.
He said: “Others would say it’s better to bottle it as soon as the wine is what you want it to be. There are pros and cons to each. There are so many ways of doing it and very few real rights and wrongs in winemaking.”
The very first wines will start to go into the bottle in April or May next year. They may not be ready for sale at that point, but winemaking is an all-year-round activity, and we need to empty our tanks before the next harvest.
After the harvest, we all do what we think is best for our vineyard and our wine. When you open a bottle of Three Choirs Vineyard wine, we hope you agree we’ve made all the right decisions!
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