robert ames
robert ames
don't forget polyunsaturated ghee: oil from the corns of holy men.
Yeah, that happened - in ernest - about 50 years ago.originally posted by Marc D:
It looks like the wine industry has adopted engineering and chemistry . . .
I’m always a little behind.originally posted by mark e:
Yeah, that happened - in ernest - about 50 years ago.originally posted by Marc D:
It looks like the wine industry has adopted engineering and chemistry . . .
Small barrel ageing. "Raising" is what you do with children - and where wine is concerned a literal translation from French.originally posted by BJ:
small barrel raising
Not a problem. To put it in context: RO for desalination goes back to 1959. Large scale use of it in wine happened thanks to one of my UCD roommates, Barry Gnekow, who was studying biochemistry in the early 70s and went on to found Ariel.originally posted by Marc D:
I’m always a little behind.originally posted by mark e:
Yeah, that happened - in ernest - about 50 years ago.originally posted by Marc D:
It looks like the wine industry has adopted engineering and chemistry . . .
originally posted by BJ:
I feel the beginnings of an important discussion.
I hate spoofed northern Rhone. Just look at what happened to Jamet, Chave.
FWIW Anita is not new oaked as far as I can tell.
There is a different sort of new clean wine out there, quite pure, direct. No stinky baba cool, no new oak/maquillage, not industrial, not traditional either. Anita seems like a good representation of this. Perhaps Germain is as well.
I sense a shift underway and don't quite know what to think.
originally posted by mark e:
Small barrel ageing. "Raising" is what you do with children - and where wine is concerned a literal translation from French.originally posted by BJ:
small barrel raising
Dunno how you're going to get appointments but go anyway. There are always a few people worth tasting (Levet, Jasmin, maybe) and a few worth gawking (Ogier vinifies each parcel separately and on a good day you can try them, an education in the dirt even if blurred by shiny-glossy winemaking). Gangloff, maybe, he was all the rage at the show.originally posted by Rahsaan:
Interesting read. I'm passing through Lyon this summer and had planned to visit Cote Rotie with a friend. I don't keep up with the wines, but figured there would be something of interest. You folks are making me reconsider!
She should be here.originally posted by BJ:
I wonder what Anita would say if she were on this thread. She might not appreciate it. Could this style simply be the result of a very clean approach, small barrel raising (which she employs), etc.?
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
Dunno how you're going to get appointments but go anyway. There are always a few people worth tasting (Levet, Jasmin, maybe) and a few worth gawking (Ogier vinifies each parcel separately and on a good day you can try them, an education in the dirt even if blurred by shiny-glossy winemaking). Gangloff, maybe, he was all the rage at the show..
Totally. The first time - ever - I heard this was on a trip to the Loire with Dressner. By that time I had worked in a number of wineries and visited dozens. Never, ever heard that. A French winemaker was speaking and Dressner was translating. He said something like "raised in steel." Thought it was funny, but completely understood where it was coming from given the French word "élevé."originally posted by BJ:
originally posted by mark e:
Small barrel ageing. "Raising" is what you do with children - and where wine is concerned a literal translation from French.originally posted by BJ:
small barrel raising
Seriously?
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
She should be here.originally posted by BJ:
I wonder what Anita would say if she were on this thread. She might not appreciate it. Could this style simply be the result of a very clean approach, small barrel raising (which she employs), etc.?
As far as I can tell, she is meticulously following rules that could make the same nice, clean wine from anything you toss in the hopper.
The 100-point wine, she says, has tastes of roasted coffee and vanilla.
originally posted by BJ:
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
She should be here.originally posted by BJ:
I wonder what Anita would say if she were on this thread. She might not appreciate it. Could this style simply be the result of a very clean approach, small barrel raising (which she employs), etc.?
As far as I can tell, she is meticulously following rules that could make the same nice, clean wine from anything you toss in the hopper.
The 100-point wine, she says, has tastes of roasted coffee and vanilla.
I appreciate the conversation in the generalities but I question the specifics. I don't think we know enough about individual domaines to make pronouncements.
Anita is brought in by Rosenthal and Germain by KLWM. Are we thinking they are the vanguard of the new wine sellout?
Again, just pushing the conversation.