Archives for December 2013

Tabor Home Winery – ‘Moonlight White’ American Seyval Blanc

This wine possesses very pale straw coloring and leaves strong legs when swirled in the glass.  One the nose it exhibits apple notes with a strong herbaceous quality.  There are faint, passing hints of tropical fruit as well.  In the mouth, it seems a bit weak, and the herbaceous qualities seems to overwhelm the fruit flavors.  The wine is soft and finishes with butter notes.

It would be best to pair this wine with a light meal, such as a summer salad or roasted vegetables.  Not ideal as an easy-drinking table wine.

3.5/5

Deer Control

Deer have long been a pest in the vineyard.  Unfortunately, there is no permanent way to keep these critters out.  All methods are simply deterrents.  Some work better than others.

A fence works pretty well but it must be high enough that they are unable to leap over it, and it should be fastened down so that they’ll be unable to push their way underneath.  Deer would much rather crawl under a fence than jump it, but a fence of at least 10 feet high should be used.  Unfortunately, as with many things, cost is an issue.

An electric fence may work well but needs to have constant attention since it can be easily torn down by a deer running through it.  If you can’t use the wide electric fence conductor, tie some marking tape every few feet.  The deer can easily see the tape… and so can you.  From a distance you’ll be able to tell if it is still up.  Deer are by nature curious and will go up to the tape.  They’ll be shocked when they get too close.  An easy way to teach them to stay clear.

Another way to get deer used to an electric fence is to put peanut butter on some aluminum foil about 4 inches square and fold the foil over the wire.  The deer will smell and see the foil and be curious enough to get close and get a shock.  Use fiber glass posts to prop the foil in place since the foil will move down the wire in the wind and short out the fence to a metal post.

There are other deterrents, of course.

I have cut out the side of a plastic milk jug and put a tablespoon of bloodmeal  with some water in the jug.  I then post them several feet apart in the vineyard.  I have tied dryer sheets by young plants.  The strong smell seems to help keep the pesky deer away.  A dog is a good deterrent, definitely, but it would prove difficult to keep one in the vineyard.  Dogs are social creatures, as we know, and would not take kindly to being banished to the lonely vineyard.  I have tried scarecrows but without success.  The deer only seemed to want to get a closer look.  I have tried planting rye around the vineyard since the deer don’t seem to like to eat it.  I don’t think it was worth the effort.

Try not to plant near a wooded area – although in our area, a high deer population seems to come with any territory.  Sometimes, if you find that one side of the vineyard is getting hit harder than another, a double fence will help.  I have made a cheap fence by hanging hay bale wrap from a wire.  This seems to confuse them.  Deer like to walk on a trail or in a mowed area rather than high grass.  If you are able to block their open routes, this can help.

I used to raise Christmas trees and the deer were a terrible problem.  Finally, I had to leave a field just for the deer to browse and used deterrents to protect the rest of the trees.  I hung smelly soap like a Christmas ornament from the trees but, unfortunately, it attracted mice.  A planting away from the vineyard just for the deer may help.

Remember, everything you will try is only going to be a deterrent.  Even deer season is a temporary solution.  Since deer have a large range, even if you eliminated all of them in one given area, more will take their place in a short amount of time.

Of course, everyone seems to have their own favorite deterrent.  Some will prove more effective than others depending on the deer population in your given area during a particular time of year.  If you have a way to keep deer from being a problem don’t be afraid to share.

I, for one, would be glad to try it out.

Park Farm Winery – ‘Mississippi River Red’ Iowa Red Table Wine

This red wine displays strong legs and holds its color very well.  It displays vanilla straight away on the nose, which is quickly followed by a bounty of fruit, including strawberry, and black cherry with fig undertones.  The fruit is evident in the mouth as well.  But for a bit of sourness, this wine is well-balanced and would serve well as a pairing for many dishes.

4.5/5

Fireside Winery – ‘Firefly’ Blush Table Wine

This is a translucent ruby wine with faded edges and good, strong legs around the glass.  On the nose it exhibits the aromas of bruised apple, cherry, and a pungent grapiness.  It is soft and sweet, with gentle acidity.  In the mouth we taste predominantly bruised apple with an undercurrent of grapey flavors.  Although well balanced, there is still a hint of sourness.  Serve slightly chilled with light appetizers and deserts.

4/5

January 2014 Wine Quiz

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Q&A, Tom Nemcik

Wine professionals and enthusiasts of Iowa are well aware of the existence of vast differences between the native wine industries of Iowa and California, but what specifically differentiates the wine industry in California from the wine industry in Iowa?

Iowa Decanted guest writer, Mallory Hughes, took it upon herself to find a few answers in the following piece:

Iowa in Comparison: California

Tom Nemcik was a horticulturist. He was interested in a wide range of plants, working closely with California native plants in a nursery in Napa County propagating native plants for restoration and creating native habitats for them.

While doing this, he was surrounded by California’s viniculture and eventually found his niche in grapevine nurseries. By applying some of the thinking of native plants to viniculture, he was able to bring new, useful tactics to the propagation of grapevines.

From Nemcik’s perspective, here is what the California industry has that separates it from the Iowa wine industry:

  • Micro climates: California wines can grow pretty much everything in the diverse climates across the state – thus, creating quirky, off-beat, regionally diverse wines
  • Industrial Scale Production: California produces 250 – 300 million cases of wine per year, providing the country with 90% of all of its wine consumption. In fact, if California were an independent country, it would be the fourth largest wine producer in the world.
  • Mechanization of the Harvest Process: Due to sheer quantity, most wineries in California are part of multinational corporations that cannot harvest grapes quick enough by hand. Thus, machines do the pruning and harvesting process.
  • Trade: California has a complex process of designations, and wineries exchange fruit and juice regularly. Some wineries may grow grapes for other wineries and trade the fruit to produce wines with county designation, state designation, or AVA designation as opposed to winery designated.
  • Pest Management: California is a leader in erosion control and pest management. The University of California has programs designated to establish the least toxic, best practice for fertilization.
  • Off-Season Techniques: While California experiences mild winters, post harvesting involves irrigation and light fertilizing. In fact, the state as a whole practices cover cropping, which is planting quick germinating crops, like oats, in rows to minimize erosion and protect wine grapevines from abundant spring moisture.
  • Rapid Globalization: Now, California’s wineries are rarely comprised of entrepreneurs and mavericks who are passionate about what they do. Instead, marketers and managers often run vineyards and wineries to accommodate a more professionalized industry.

Mallory Hughes is a senior at the University of Iowa majoring in journalism and English with a particular interest in writing/editing for magazines.  She is available for freelance writing assignments and open to job offers starting in May 2014.

Paul Tabor, Winemaker

Tabor Home Vineyards and Winery has a rich history intertwined with that of the Tabor family. Paul Tabor, winemaker and manager of the vineyard and winery, is the fifth generation of a long line of Tabors making their livelihood off of the farmstead.

“At least in Iowa, we are at a time when most are not living on farms but still have a first-hand connection or experience with farming in Iowa,” Tabor said. “To them it is compelling that we viewed our traditional farmstead as an opportunity for a new agricultural industry in Iowa and that we have diversified the farm to meet the needs of a new generation.”

His interest in winemaking was cultivated from an early age as he watched his father make wine out of everything from lilacs to elderberries to wild plums throughout his childhood and teenage years – an introduction familiar to many amateur winemakers throughout Iowa.

“My dad was a very good amateur winemaker, and as a teenager, it was a very interesting thing to join in with my dad as a father-son hobby,” Tabor said. “I am always amazed at the connections that develop when I tell the story of my dad’s serious interest in home wine making and how that had something to do with the development of my interest in wines. It seems that everyone had an aunt in their family that was the family’s winemaker!”

His father’s amateur interest blossomed into a small winery in the basement of their house, creating wines to enjoy at family meals, and these early experiences with winemaking remained with Tabor into his later years through college and graduate school, where he attained his PhD in microbiology (useful later on for understanding the science behind fermentation).

During his time as a professor at Indiana State University, Tabor took over the commercial vineyard of a friend who was having health issues, and in return received most of that year’s harvest. He brought the grapes back to Iowa and made wine with the Marechal Foch grapes that were being grown in Indiana.

“And everybody was just enthralled with that wine and the quality of the wine,” said Tabor. “It wasn’t like concord anymore or any of the other wines.”

Tabor’s interest was sparked and he used cuttings from the vineyard in Indiana to begin his own vineyard at the Tabor farmstead without much thought of those original cuttings blossoming into a commercial vineyard and winery. As the grapes grew, he began doing market research on what it would be like to have an estate winery raising its own grapes and producing most of its wine from those grapes in Iowa. As he researched, he talked with larger wine producers in other states in the Midwest who provided encouragement.

“They said, Iowans really do support good products that are produced in state,” said Tabor. “They were very enthusiastic about promoting me to get started.”

Between 1983 and 1989, they worked hard to evaluate many varieties of grapes and styles of winemaking to help determine what would produce distinctive distinguished wines for Iowa. This hard work and research helped to contribute to the eventual success of the Tabor Home Vineyards and Winery.

“As results of our work, we have made dozens of gold medal winning and Best-of-Class wines from our vineyards,” Tabor said. “It has been very gratifying to see our efforts in viticulture and winemaking be so successful and begin the re-birth of this wine industry in Iowa.”

In 1995, Tabor managed to obtain a forgivable loan sponsored by the state of Iowa for value-added producers not using commodities and retailing a processed product from a facility in Iowa. This helped get the vineyard and winery off the ground, and become an actual business.

“When we were bonded in 1996, this became my full time job and I haven’t really looked back since,” Tabor said.

A major difficulty Tabor found as he began his new venture was helping wine drinkers to move beyond traditional cabernets or chardonnays and try wines distinctively unique to the Iowa region.

“Having known or experienced very sweet fruit and grape wines from Iowa wineries for a very long time, wine drinkers were skeptical that quality fine wines could be produced in Iowa,” Tabor said. “It has been and continues as an educational effort to get wine drinkers turned around to a positive impression of quality Iowa wines.”

Something he found especially helpful as he started out in the wine business was attending conferences on grape-growing and wine making in the Midwest, traveling all over from Missouri to Minnesota.

“You don’t have to go to too many of those to realize you have to keep going because there’s an awful lot to learn in this business,” Tabor said.

Despite the immense amount of information to consume, Tabor said the vineyard and winery community is a very open one, with a desire to help their fellow grape-growers and winemakers.

“I think winemakers as a professional group are very interested in sharing information,” said Tabor. “You find when you’re talking to the winemakers that they’re very open and willing to discuss what they do, knowing that they’re going to get you’re feedback about what you do at your winery.”

Tabor said often it is not a large change or suggestion but rather a matter of tweaking an element or changing the timing of what you’re doing that elevate wine to another level. A level Tabor Home Vineyard and Winery strives for every day.

“All those things are very valuable,” Tabor said. “Those small little things you can learn about the winemaking take the wine from a good or better quality to the best quality.”

As they work every day to produce the best quality wine possible, Tabor Home Vineyards and Winery still looks forward to the future as both a leader in winemaking and grape growing and a source of income for future Tabors.

“I hope Tabor Home Winery is recognized and looked to as the innovator in developing wine styles for the upper Midwest region,” Tabor said. “It is our goal that Tabor Home Winery is successful in providing a good livelihood for another generation on our family farm and that the venture can be an opportunity for creativity.”

Midwest Wine Comeback

Guest writer, Mallory Hughes, submitted the following piece for Iowa Decanted‘s first issue of 2014.

 

At the top of the hill a building sits and a red pick-up arrives, its bed filled with oak barrels. A rocking chair on the front porch sways slightly in the wind. On every side of the structure but one, grapevines are lined neatly in rows, the fruit picked for the season and the leaves now dried, have fallen to the ground. The rows of vines rise and fall with the rolling hills, stopping only once the vines reach the sunburnt forest in the distance. This is not Napa Valley, nor Sonoma Valley, nor anywhere in the state of California. This is Swisher, Iowa, at Cedar Ridge Winery and Distillery.

Before Prohibition, Iowa was the sixth largest grape producing state in the nation. But as Prohibition expanded the market for corn and soybeans, wine production fell because decreased demand for wine grapes resulted in destruction of vineyards. There was damage to grapevines from chemical drift from herbicides, as well as a severe blizzard in 1940 that killed a lot of the wine grape crops.

“Jumping to about 2000, the grape and wine industry is trying to restart all over the country,” Craig Tordsen of the Agricultural Marketing Resource Center at Iowa State University said.

Over the past 20 years, advancements in botanical research and breeding at Iowa State University, the University of Minnesota, and Cornell University have made growing wine grapes in Iowa and other Midwest climates possible.

In the 1980’s, the University of Minnesota began a program to produce hybrid wine grapes able to sustain temperatures in the Midwest. However, it was not until 2000 that a research winery and enology lab were established to study all aspects of wine and winemaking.

The grapes created were cold hardy varietals called French-American hybrids. These grapes produce a full crop of fruit which can withstand the cold winter temperatures of the Midwest, sometimes -30 degrees Fahrenheit or colder.

In September 2006, the Midwest Grape and Wine Industry Institute at Iowa State University was established. As a result of Iowa’s rising grape and wine industry, the Institute conducts research on cold hardy grapes, enology research, and developed a quality award program along with an outreach program for growers everywhere.

Perhaps another reason for the increase in vineyards and wineries in the state of Iowa beyond the French-American hybrid grapes and the extension and outreach program is the Iowa Alcohol Beverage Division. Due to the size of Iowa’s wine industry, obtaining permits for vineyards and wineries is still affordable. In states like California, permits can cost well over $500.

In the state of Iowa, there are different permits one may receive to produce and sell wine. A class “A” permit, which is the official state license that is required to own and operate a native Iowa winery, may be purchased for only $25 per year through the IBD.

The other two permits, however, are for established wineries that are looking to do more with their product than sell it at the winery itself. A class “B” Iowa permit allows wineries to sell their product at off-premise locations like farmers markets and special events. The class “C” Iowa wine permit allows wineries to sell by the glass at wine festivals.

The dedication of researchers at both universities made vineyards and wine production in the state of Iowa possible. Without them, Cedar Ridge Winery & Distillery or Fireside Winery might not exist.

In 2000, Cedar Ridge owners Jeff and Laurie Quint bought a plot of land in the countryside in Swisher, Iowa, and planted ten varieties of French American cold hardy grapes. Three years later, fruit was on the vines and wine was ready to be made.

Jamie Siefken, Jeff Quint’s media spokesperson, explained that Quint works as a CFO in Marion. During the dot com burst he was afraid he would never retire, but decided with his wife that a winery would be his first choice if and when he did.

Just 26 miles west of Cedar Ridge sits Fireside Winery on land adjacent to a family farm. In 2005, after researching the Iowa wine industry at Iowa State’s Extension Program, Bill and Rona Wyant planted wine grapes. By 2007, fruit was produced and the doors were open.

“We’re currently corn and soybean farmers. So, we were looking to diversify and had the interest in the wine,” Rona Wyant said. “We decided that we were going to go ahead and jump in and give it a five-year try.”

Harvest season can be anywhere from mid-August to mid-September depending on the year’s weather as it arrives. But before any harvesting can be done, some precautions are taken to ensure the grapes stay on the vine.

For pre-harvest, Cedar Ridge lays nets over the vines to stop birds from eating all of the fruit before it is picked. At Fireside, a canon bursts air at intervals to scare away the birds, and an electrified fence prevents hungry deer from entering the grounds.

For local vineyards, harvesting the grapes is extremely labor intensive. Both Cedar Ridge and Fireside Wineries put out a call for labor.

Cedar Ridge advertises on Craigslist and social media, but sends an e-mail newsletter that goes out to about 9,000 people as well. They pay each picker per pound of grapes picked.

“We were done in three weeks this past year,” Siefken said. “They’ll come out early Saturday morning and start picking. Usually they’ll be done around noon. And then the guys [staff] will process the grapes all afternoon. It’s definitely a long month or two months for the production staff to work.”

Every year, Fireside Winery hosts an annual “iPick iStomp iDrink” event. They put out a notice in the beginning of August to all of the fan club members and anyone who is on the newsletter list asking them to sign up for one of the three or four weekends to help pick the grapes.

“They come out to the main vineyard at 7 a.m. Then, they go through and pick grapes, talk to Zach and the guys when they’re out in the vineyard with them. They’ll talk about what grape they’re picking, what kind of wine that’s going to make, and then we’ll bring them back,” Wyant explains.

After their return to the Fireside tasting room, they receive a t-shirt, bottle of wine, and lunch, all before doing the grape stomp. Typically the 400 spots fill within two days.

While the harvest process is the same for both red and white wine grape varieties, it is the processing that differentiates the end product.

For white wines, the grapes are picked, de-stemmed, and crushed. They are then chilled and pressed, disposing of the excess seeds and skins before using the juice. Juice treatment occurs, testing the acidity or pH, and adding enzymes and sugars, depending on what types of wine are being made. Then the fermentation process begins, adding yeast and fermenting, stopping earlier for sweet wine, but keeping it in the barrel longer for dry wine.

The red wine process is similar but what gives red wine the color and tannins that white wine lacks is the skin. While red wine grapes are also de-stemmed, the skins are left on during the cool fermentation process that allows the juice to absorb the color and tannins from the skins. During that process the sugars or acids are added to create a dry or sweet wine. Once absorbed, the yeast is added and the juice is pressed to remove the skins before aging and fermenting. Due to differences in styles of winemaking, aging in oak barrels is an option, but not a requirement.

Wine grape growing is all about trial and error. One grape variety may be abundant and produce delicious wines, while another seems to fall short. At Cedar Ridge, St. Croix is one of those that just do not seem right.

“It tastes like a vegetable,” said an employee, enjoying a salad in the tasting room on his lunch break.

“Yeah, we’ve started to not do St. Croix,” Siefken said. “It’s also a mess to pick, too.”

The most successful wine grapes at Cedar Ridge, said Siefken, are La Crescent, Marquette, La Crosse, and Frontenac. Three of these are the University of Minnesota’s most outstanding grape varieties that produce award-winning wines.

At Fireside, similar varieties have been successful. Wyant said the Marquette, Brianna, La Crosse, St. Croix, and Frontenac have been the best producers.

Cedar Ridge is the very first winery/distillery combination in the state of Iowa since the Prohibition. When a wine grape fails to meet expectations, they can usually use the fruit to produce spirits instead.  “We’re also a distillery, so we can make brandies, port or fortified wine, and grappas, and other products like that where we can use a less superior variety for other facets of our business,” Siefken said.

Fireside likewise has alternatives for less successful grape varieties. Zach Bott, son-in-law of the Wyant’s and winemaker at Fireside, may create red wine blends using multiple grape varieties.

While the blends are often made with Iowa-grown grapes, imported California grapes allow them to produce dry reds that are more difficult to make with Iowa grape varieties. By importing the whole fruit, the de-stemming and fermentation processes can be completed locally.

Cedar Ridge occasionally imports whole grapes from Lodi, California, located in San Joaquin County. A few days after it has been picked, the fresh fruit shows up on top of the hill in a produce truck that has been pumped full of nitrogen gas to keep the fruit from oxidizing and spoiling on the way.

By importing the whole grape as opposed to juice or concentrate, they feel that they can get a better quality product, Siefken said. But, to further differentiate the winery, Cedar Ridge buys grapes from other Iowa wineries as well.

“We might get more of a yield from year to year, but as we grow as a business, I mean, there’s only one way to do more wine, and that’s to bring in grapes from outside. So there’s a couple Iowa wineries that in the past two years have grown their entire crop for us,” Siefken said.

Doing it all, growing the grape and seeing it out to the end product is something special to all vineyards and wineries in Iowa.

“Something about in the industry, when you tell people that [the grapes] are grown here, it excites people more,” he said. “There’s a lot of competition in Iowa and it separates yourself from others. To be surrounded by 10 acres of grapes there’s just an ambiance for people to be out here.”

Nationally, the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau established American Viticulture Areas, or AVAs to allow vintners and consumers to attribute a given quality and reputation with a certain geographic location. In order to qualify for an AVA designation, at least 85% of the grapes used in the wine must have been grown in that region.

The United States has 206 AVAs total, with California carrying 100 of them. Eastern Iowa is included in the Upper Mississippi River Valley (UMRV) AVA that was created in June 2009 and is the largest AVA in the United States at 29,900 square miles. It covers regions in Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa, and Illinois. The UMRV AVA represents 32 wineries and 445 vineyard acres.

The US wine industry is commonly associated with California, which has actually taken quite a different form than the industry in Iowa.

One major difference, Wyant says, is that the wine consumption in California is simply much higher than in Iowa, and people there have been consuming dry wines for a long time. She explains that if you give a new wine drinker a dry red wine from a classic French grape variety like a Cabernet Sauvignon, he or she probably will not like it.

“If you do a tasting in California, in the Napa or Sonoma area, you’re going to find it very hard to find a sweet wine. Here, you’re going to find that our wine palettes are a lot sweeter,” Wyant said. “We’re just learning to drink wine, well, not me! But, as a whole, we’re learning to drink wine, so we start off a little bit on a sweeter side.”

Siefken said comparing cooler climate regions to a place like California is like comparing apples to oranges. The grapes themselves are so different that the product will be very different as well.

Regarding varieties of product, he said, “It really all comes down to climate. Iowa wines, we have a short growing season here and we have a cooler climate.”

“Grapevines themselves start off with high acidity and low sugar and during the growing season it develops more sugar, and then the acidity goes down. That determines the style of wines that you can make, based off of the fruit that you have,” he added.

“I think that’s the farmer in us,” Wyant said. “We’re very proud of having grapes that are grown in Iowa that we feel can stand up next to a lot of the other wineries.”

In the last few years, 15 new wineries have opened in the state of Iowa alone. And as of 2012, there are 98 Iowa wineries. According to the Agricultural Marketing Resource Center at Iowa State University these wineries produce more than 240,000 gallons of wine annually.

“The easy sales have been found,” Tordsen said. “Iowa Native wineries need to develop a stronger marketing approach and improved quality if they hope to grow in the future.”

To view the accompanying slideshow, visit Iowa Decanted‘s Facebook page.

Mallory Hughes is a senior at the University of Iowa majoring in journalism and English with a particular interest in writing/editing for magazines.  She is available for freelance writing assignments and open to job offers starting in May 2014.

Iowa Decanted, New Services

Iowa Decanted is proud to announce our new evaluation services, specifically designed for the growth and development of Iowa wineries and wine retailers.  In accordance with our mission to assist in the development and promotion of the native Iowa wine industry, we are now able to offer our skills and experience to businesses wishing to evaluate and refine their comprehensive customer experience.

Our staff is uniquely qualified to offer evaluation and consultation services for digital as well as physical locations.  With over thirty years of accumulated experience in communication services, digital development, and marketing/storybuilding, we can offer constructive criticism and advice to those wishing to further develop and grow their business.  And since members of our evaluation staff are experienced wine-tasters and evaluators, our perspective is particularly valuable for wineries and wine retailers.

In any business, the prospective customer faces a high level of uncertainty, particularly in regards to the quality of goods and services.  Customers who are uncertain, or who lack specific knowledge or experience will focus on a number of quality signals in order to make educated decisions about their purchase.  Among these signals is the digital and physical servicescape of the business, the consistency and quality of customer engagement by staff, and, of course, the quality of the product sold.  The perception of quality is intrinsically linked to each of these elements.

The staff of Iowa Decanted has a vested interest in the success of Iowa wineries and retailers.  Our high level of experience in communication services and evaluation puts us in a particularly strong position to assist in the development and cultivation of the business environment.  Our Mystery Visit Service allows our staff to assess the quality of customer service, servicescaping, product, and overall message of the business environment.

For additional information on service packages, please visit our Services page, or contact Iowa Decanted founder, Nick Thornburg, directly at nick@iowadecanted.com.  Be sure to ask about our Sharing is Caring offer to receive a fee waiver.

‘Busy-Bee’ Almond Cake

We all get busy, but this cake recipe makes it easy to enjoy something fresh, fun, and delicious without having to spend too much time at it.  It’s a particular favorite of Iowa Decanted staff – and perfect for pairing with a semi-sweet white or a fruit forward light-bodied red.

Ingredients

2 & 2/3 Cups all-purpose flour

1 & 1/3 Cup sugar

4 teaspoons baking powder

1 & 1/3 Cup Almond milk

1/2 Cup butter, softened

2 eggs

2 teaspoons vanilla

1 teaspoon cinnamon

 

Instructions

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.  Grease a large rectangular cake pan and set aside.

Combine flour, sugar, and baking powder in a mixing bowl.  Once mixed, add the almond milk, butter, eggs, and vanilla.  Mix until well combined, then spread into the greased pan.

Bake until the top of the cake begins to brown and a wooden toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean.  Around 30 minutes.  Let cool for ten minutes and serve warm with your choice of topping.  Goes well with fresh berries, whipped cream, or a buttercream glaze.