Current State of "Terroir Debate"

originally posted by robert ames:
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
originally posted by MLipton:
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
originally posted by MLipton:
Marc,
Where I get hung up in this whole discussion is the idea that minerals or nutrients taken up by the roots impart volatile components to the wine that we can smell/taste. What does granite or limestone taste like? What do they smell like, and does that smell emanate from the mineral or from microorganisms resident on the mineral surface? (SPOILER: it's the latter cf. petrichor)

This is why I find SFJoe's suggestion that the soil influences the mycorrhizal ecology resident around the roots and that it's their interaction with the roots that gives rise to the goût de terroir that experience has taught us is real so appealing. Certainly, yeast populations on grape skins and in the cellar will no doubt vary with location, too, but whether that can explain why one lieux-dit in a vineyard tastes reliably different than another I'm not sure.

Mark Lipton

But how does one explain tastes such as eucalyptus, lavender or garrigue? Are they just epiphenomena?

That’s been answered above. If you can smell them that’s due to volatile oils. Those same oils can settle on grape skins and even transit through the skins into the pulp.

Mark Lipton
So where does the lavender that I've gotten in wines from places like Burgundy come from?

provence?
Sorry, the Mistral blows north to south.
 
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