Kanonkop Wine Estate

History

Kanonkop Paul Sauer

The estate was originally purchased by JW Sauer, a cabinet member of the union of South Africa. His son Paul Oliver Sauer, took over the reigns from his father and was in 1967 joined by Springbok rugby great, Jan Boland Coetzee. Mary Sauer, daughter of Paul Sauer, married Jannie Krige, a rugby administrator at the University of Stellenbosh. He took early retirement and together with Coetzee made the first estate bottled wines at Kanonkop in 1973.

Beyers Truter joined Kanonkop in 1980 as winemaker, and developed the reputation of the estate still further with his excellent winemaking skills, especially by developing Pinotage into a world class wine. Beyers has now left Kanonkop in the able hands of new winemaker Abri Beeselaar to devote more time to Beyerskloof, but he remains an active consultant to the winery. Worldwide acclaim for the top quality of Kanonkop has fuelled huge worldwide demand for these iconic wines  

Viticulture

Kanonkop is renowned for its red wines, with Pinotage making up 50% of all plantings, Cabernet Sauvignon 30%, Merlot 15% and Cabernet Franc 5%. The Pinotage vines are retained as bush vines to provide maximum ripeness and assist with regulating the crop. Most of these vines are more than 50 years old. The Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot and Cabernet Franc have been trellised into a five strand hedge.

Except for a small portion of the estate where the soil is slightly sandy, no irrigation is done. Pinotage, Merlot and Cabernet Franc yield approximately six tons per hectare (4 000 lit/ha) while the Cabernet Sauvignon yield is on average four tons per hectare (2 600 lit/ha).

Kanonkop Estate

Vinification

Fermentation takes place in traditional open concrete fermenters, but with a slight difference, in that the tanks are wide and shallow rather than high and deep. This process ensures maximum skin contact. The cap is punched by hand up to once an hour until 6-7% alcohol has been attained. During this period the temperature is fixed between 28 and 30 degrees Celsius, when most of the colour, good tannins and flavours are extracted. Time on the skins is between three and five days. When the wine is dry, malolactic fermentation completes the process in concrete and stainless steel tanks, as well as new 225 litre oak barriques.

Awards

Kanonkop Estate has often been described by those in the know as being the South African equivalent of a Premier Cru or First Growth. International awards accumulated over more than a decade have gone a long way to substantiate these claims.

Awards recieved span nearly two decades and include numerous from the IWSC covering for winemaker of the year, best-blended red wine and best pinotage. Awards won also cover, Canada, Brussels and consistent gold and double gold winners in the South African Veritas Competition.

To find out more about Kanonkop visit the Kanonkop website at http://www.kanonkop.co.za/


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