originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
similar work
By this I assume you mean tasting and not winemaking?
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
similar work
Correct.originally posted by Rahsaan:
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
similar work
By this I assume you mean tasting and not winemaking?
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
Correct.originally posted by Rahsaan:
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
similar work
By this I assume you mean tasting and not winemaking?
Well, of course. The point of my utterance is not to exclude everyone who hasn't had the exact same wine. The point is to exclude people who don't make an effort to taste, to think, to study, to remember -- to some degree.originally posted by Rahsaan:
But, while the need to communicate the experience of wine in succinct and evocative terms may lead to some Shelf Talking Abuses, it seems to me that one can still communicate the experience of wine (or cinema, or literature, or eating, etc, etc) to others who have not experienced that particular piece.
The demurrer from Nashville led the plaintiff:
All qualitative assessments are hollow?
originally posted by Steve "Mr Cranky-Pants" Edmunds:
And, of course, your palate, and preferences have, no doubt shifted since that bottle came into your possession, so the comment about Beaudry and Grange des Peres makes a lot of sense, at least to me.
who goes on to say:
And those people who were into Rhonish-California wines, those guys are in-fucking-sufferable (because, mostly, they don't seem to be able to distinguish the ones from the Rhone and the ones not, and it's making me cranky!)!
Somewhere in there, Claude Kolm wrote:
I should clarify: I did not mean that the 1997 Clape was undrinkable (stuff deleted) just that is was the only Clape I've ever had that was not interesting and that I had no desire to have again.
VLM says:
If only I had the Staff of Ra.
originally posted by Rahsaan:
If you limit yourself only to those with the exact same experiences/work as you, then you may quickly need to develop Multiple Personalities in order to have a conversation.
originally posted by Chris Coad:
originally posted by Bwood:
originally posted by Chris Coad:
originally posted by Bwood:
originally posted by Florida Jim:
One of the reasons I find tasting comparisons and qualitative assessments somewhat hollow, regardless of context.
Best, Jim
All qualitative assessments are hollow?
Jim has recently joined the Nihilists of Wine group on Facebook.
I was recently a guest of Jim and saw no evidence of German techno-pop or marmots in his home, so I am going to bet against the Nihilist theory.
It's all hollow, baby, no matter which way you slice it.
Touch my marmot! TOUCH IT!
And now, this is the time on Wein Disorder ven ve dance...
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
The drawback of using a richer vocabulary is that the reader is obligated to know a bit about it before reading. That is the point.
I don't mean to single you out here, Thor, but this idea that food is integral to wine tasting I find strained at best
Rahsaan, you've been hanging out with pedants too long.originally posted by Rahsaan:
But it doesn't mean that there isn't also a place for talking about wine to people with less knowledge.
originally posted by Bwood:
originally posted by Florida Jim:
One of the reasons I find tasting comparisons and qualitative assessments somewhat hollow, regardless of context.
Best, Jim
All qualitative assessments are hollow?
originally posted by Yixin:
Which is why there are so few good wine writers, who are able to translate the distorted experiences of barrel-tastings, horizontals/verticals and trade shows into something useful for the laity. By and large they seem to have preserved their love for wine, and it typically shows in their writing. Funnily enough the first name that comes to mind is Ed Behr (who was just featured in the FT), but that's also a function of his prose style.
originally posted by Florida Jim:
You left a little out.
If the tasting is wine against wine (no food) I think the result is skewed by the comparative nature of the format and the fact that you are simply tasting wine with wine (which is usually not the way I drink wine - hence, such comparisons lose relevance).
If the tasting is one with food, the focus of the experience shifts and its the enjoyment of the pairing that matters most; not is one wine better than another.
Hence, some ranking or quality assessment of a wine in either context suffers by the very nature of the context.
And then, of course, there's the matter of communicating one's assessment.
IE., all qualitative assessments of wine are somewhat hollow (or at minimum, suspect).
Best, Jim
originally posted by VLM:
Come onIs there really not a qualitative difference between Mugnier and Magnien that can be quantified?
originally posted by VLM:
We all have them. It is more difficult to argue for them than to take the post-modern bullshit way out towards relativism. I find relativism to be the worst kind of intellectual laziness.