Torlesse Wine, NZ

晴阳 Yang Qin Zhou

<h1><b><font color="#167efb">History</font></b><br><br>The company takes its name from an early Canterbury resident, surveyor, and farmer, Englishman Charles Torlesse. He gave his name to the Torlesse mountain range which part circles the Canterbury Plains and was at one time the largest landowner and farmer in North Canterbury and founder of the nearby town of Rangiora. Interestingly, the name Torlesse is given to the underlying bedrock from which most New Zealand soils are derived – Torlesse, the terroir of New Zealand!<br><br>The winery first started its life as a farm woolshed. In 1987 it was converted into a winery for Glenmark Wines by John McCaskey and Torlesse Wines moved to Waipara in 1991 and still shares the production facilities. Many additions have made the winery self-sufficient in all aspects of winemaking from crushing to bottling, a claim that some wineries can not make.<br><br>The Torlesse Cellar door was built and opened in March 2000 but Torlesse has produced wines from 1991 onwards making it one of the older wineries in Waipara. Most grapes are hand-harvested and all are batch-processed keeping different vineyard components separate for assessment until final blending. Torlesse has purchased a capping machine and was the first winery in Waipara to bottle and use the screwcap closure on their 2001 Waipara Riesling. They have carefully assessed the wines with the screw cap closure against the same wine with cork over an 8 year period and find that the screw cap gives consistency and graceful aging for both white and red wines.<br><br>They now fill and close all of their wines with screw caps, although we have the ability to use either cork closure or screw cap if clients have a preference. They have storage that allows up to 200 tonnes to be processed at Vintage.</h1>