This process is known as solera in Spanish, and was developed by the producers of sherry. In a Spanish sherry solera, the vintner may transfer about a third of each barrel a year. A solera sherry has to be at least three years old when bottled. A quite similar process is called
sostrera, used to produce fortified wines in the Mediterranean regions of France. In
Sicily, where
Marsala wine is made, the system is called
in perpetuum. Solera vinification is used in the making of
Mavrodafni ('Black Laurel'), a fortified red dessert wine made in the northern
Peloponnese in Greece. Exceptional
Mavrodafni vintages are released every 20 or 30 years: they are of minimal availability and expensive. Vintners in
Rutherglen, Australia, produce fortified muscat-style and
Tokay-style wines using the solera process. In South Australia, some fortified wines (akin to tawny port) are made from blends of
Shiraz,
Grenache, and
Mourvèdre.
Glenfiddich, a
Speyside distillery in Scotland, has a 15-year-old
whisky that uses a vatting process similar to the solera. The whisky is labelled as their "15 year old
single malt Scotch Whisky". For Scotch whisky, the stated age must refer to the youngest of whisky's components. Barrels are emptied into the solera vat and mixed. Then whisky is drawn from the vat to be bottled, with the vat never being more than half emptied. Since the process began in 1998, the vat has never been emptied. The oldest
port wine producer in America, Old Vine Tinta Solera at Ficklin, has used a solera since 1948. In
Okinawa, Japan, where
awamori is made, the traditional system similar to the solera is called
shitsugi. The solera process has been used since the 17th century to produce
sour ales in Sweden, where it is known as
hundraårig öl ('hundred-year beer'). The beer is rarely commercially available, being instead made at the large manors for private consumption. A process of partially emptying and refilling barrels with beer is undertaken by
craft breweries in the United States. ==See also==