Oswaldo Costa
Oswaldo Costa
originally posted by MLipton:
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
originally posted by MLipton:
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
originally posted by MLipton:
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
originally posted by MLipton:
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
originally posted by scottreiner:
originally posted by Marc Hanes:
Too bad I was in Wisconsin visiting my in-laws 'cause I ain't buying no $69 Albariño even with my employee discount! Yeesh.
Forjas del Salnes, Rodriguez Vazquez (esp Escolma), Leirana, Zarate, Alabamar, and Nanclares, all make expensive Albarinos that are worth every penny. While they may not be, for me, everyday wines, they are brilliant wines and I drink them whenever I can.
Too bad they all block malos.
Why’s that, O.?
Mark Lipton
Otherwise the whites from there (and from the neighboring Douro) would lack acidity, since the climate is generally too warm for balance without intervention. They are, indeed, often delish, if one doesn't mind the sometimes bracing, even strident character of malic, but there are enough producers in climates that don't require systematic intervention.
Sorry I wasn’t clearer. I know why they block malo; I was interested in why you considered that a negative. Is it on purely philosophical grounds, or is there an organoleptic objection?
Mark Lipton
Ah, sorry, yes, there is a multiple objection. The best Portuguese white wine producer that I know claims to be able to identify wines in which the malo was blocked. And utterly despises them. I am not confident of my ability to spot same, but there is often something harsh about the acidity of Galician and northern Portuguese whites. Malic is certainly harsher than tartaric.
I also object to it on philosophical grounds, since it's just as much an intervention as chaptalization or acidification or nfo. Sharon used to think I was being precious in my recurring (and perhaps pet, because uncommon) objection to blocked malos; it's in the public record. So be it. My precious. I know that the guys in question have to make a living with what the weather gives them, but I'd rather put my Euros to work supporting producers who are less goal-oriented.
As you know from prior exchanges, there are wines vinified at certain temperatures that will not go through malo. There are others where the process has to be encouraged. Does vinifying at higher temps to allow malo or using other methods to enforce it also run counter to your programmatic (a more accurate word than philosophical) objections? Also, whereas not liking to much acid is comprehensible, do you also like buttered popcorn on your chardonnay? Do you not drink Chenin blanc? Do you prefer Rieslings that have gone through malic?
I agree that programmatic is a better term. Assuming you want an answer, I don't consider it an intervention if a wine does not go through malo because the cellar temperature is (naturally) very cold. Or because there's not enough malic to fire up the bacteria. But if cold or heat is generated to induce or prevent malo, of course that's an intervention, just as much as sterile filtration. So, from a programmatic pov, a pov that is obviously important to me, any intervention to induce or block malo is equivalent to any intervention to increase or decrease acidity or sweetness or generate extraneous oak flavors and textures. But I wouldn't mind any of these interventions if all I cared about was flavor.
This seems to me to be a slippery slope, O. Isn’t digging a subterranean cave to vinify your wine then also an intervention? Shouldn’t the cuves or amphorae or concrete eggs be situated close to the fields, in a shed or something?
Mark Lipton
Yes, Mark, a slippery slope into absurdity. I suppose digging a subterranean cave for the express purpose of blocking malo would be an intervention, but that would be ridiculous, as you no doubt realize.
What makes something an intervention, in my book, is the goal-driven attitude, rather than the willingness to let nature do its thing. But you might say, left to nature, wine will become vinegar. So, allow me to go back to (my) first principles:
What do I want in a wine, on top of being delicious? I want it to be what it "wants" to be, not what the maker wants it to be. Because I want it to express where it comes from, not the imposition of the maker’s esthetic goals. There’s blurriness there, I know. An analogy that works for me is raising children. I want to help my children be what they want to be rather than what I want them to be. But if they get sick, I will call the doctor because being sick may be natural, but it might prevent them becoming what they want to become. So, I prefer wines where the winemaker does the bare minimum to prevent them from becoming defective, but not things that will make it different from what it “wants” to be. Though the difference between process-driven and goal-driven can be blurry, that doesn’t make the distinction less useful. To me at least.
What the wine wants to be can never be wholly divorced from the winemaker’s goals, methinks. It starts with the choice of vineyard location, continues with the choice of grape type, clonal selection, rootstock, planting density, training method, etc. “indigenous” yeasts have been shown to be an ecosystem that changes with time and includes often “cultured” yeasts that have taken residence in the winemaking facility. Since fermentations get quite hot, temperature control is used for more reasons than just blocking malo. I think most full malo Chardonnays get some cooling.
Mark Lipton
Agreed, in much the same way that what a child wants to be can never be wholly divorced from the parents' goals. But that doesn't stop me from trying to equip my children to be who they want to be, even if that runs counter to my desires and ambitions for them. But it's certainly true that, in wine, the winemaker has to make many choices, like the ones you mention, otherwise the wine cannot be made. But maybe we can distinguish between unavoidable choices and purely voluntary/elective ones?