originally posted by MLipton:
originally posted by Levi Dalton:
But even Lynch was quite sure that there was a noticeable taste different between wines that had seen SO2 and ones that hadn't. He felt that the use of SO2 divided up the flavor of the wine, and he used his hands in a kind of cutting motion as he described this, the divisions in the taste he had found. He felt the non-SO2 wines to be more all of a piece, in terms of flavor.
In a similar vein, I found a tasting in Marcel Lapierre's cellar back in '01 quite instructional: in the midst of various barrel samples, he gave us a side-by-side comparison of two wines. After stating our preferences, it was revealed that they were the same wine, one with SO2 and the other without. Of the 5 of us who sampled them (excluding the cellar staff, who were obviously not tasting blind) all preferred the sans soufre, finding it to be fruitier, fresher and more lively than the sulfured version. Lapierre was quite adamant, though, that he wouldn't sell the sans soufre to anyone who couldn't guarantee transportation and storage temperatures never to exceed 14C.
Mark Lipton