Tasting Notes

Steve Edmunds

Steve Edmunds
ACROSS THE GREAT DIVIDE (I wrote this for my website in December '05)

For quite a number of years after I became involved in the wine business, I remembered the taste of every wine I tried, often vividly. I kept rigorous, methodical notes, for a fairly long time, in a number of different notebooks, since I often couldnt remember what Id done with one or another of them.

Its ironic, I guess; I didnt feel like I needed the notes to help me remember the wines, at least not at first. I just wanted a record of what Id tasted. Even in the 70s, though, this was about scoring; there wasnt much of a language for talking about what wines tasted like, or, more importantly, what one might say about what ones internal experience of tasting a particular wine was like. There were only points. A certain number of points were awarded for color, for clarity, for aroma, for flavors, for balance, for overall impression. I used a scale that had been developed at the University of California, at Davis, the 20 point system.

After a certain point (oops, theres that word again), when life became complicated enough that I could almost never manage to keep a notebook at hand for the purpose, I stopped taking notes. I could still remember all the wines, and felt I had a clear sense of how each of them compared with the others. But it wasnt necessarily anything I could articulate with any precision. The secrets were (safely or not) locked up inside my nervous system.

Now its been over 36 years since I started paying any attention to wine, and Id guess its more than half that long since I began to let go of a lot of those fragments of remembered taste information about what must amount to several tens of thousands of different wines. When Im around certain of my colleagues and associates these days I sometimes feel a little sheepish for being the only one not scribbling tasting notes when theres something in a glass in front of me.

I am interested in how other people feel about the wines they taste, especially if its a wine of which I have some knowledge, but may never have tasted, or perhaps a wine I had several years ago and wonder what it might be like now. There are a number of websites on the Internet on which people post their tasting notes for others to read, and several years ago I began to scan them occasionally for notes of interest. (The scanning led, quite naturally, to reading innumerable discussions about various things wine-related, and wasting inordinate amounts of time, some of which I thoroughly enjoyed.)

So many tasting notes seem to read as though they exist entirely unto themselves, as though they replicate, somehow, the objective taste characteristics of a wine. As though the writer may have forgotten that it took both the wine and the taster to produce the notes. And as though the reader of those notes will know just exactly what the writers experience was, even though the writer has rendered this objective description, as though his presence hadnt really been necessary. No surprise, perhaps, that such notes so often seem to be largely devoid of a recognizable sense of anyones presence. The lights are on, but theres nobody home.

Even after all these years, then, the question that remains paramount for me is: how do you convey the experience you have when you taste a particular wine? Does it mean comparing the smell of a wine to apricots or blueberries, hazelnuts or guava? Its a place to start; I think the more precisely one can draw those comparisons the more meaningful the comparisons are likely to be. Ive spent some time tasting with vintners in France with whom the discussion of what was evoked by the smell and taste of the wines was a process that generated great excitement and enthusiasm. Does it smell like peaches?

Well, yes, but what kind of peach?

A white peach, of course, just a few days before its ripe!

A white peach from East of the Dentelles, near Vaison, exactement!

Not the peach, but the peach skin, from the orchard next to the lavender field at the top of the hill, above the autoroute!

Ah, yes, but only from a cool year, like 96!

Oui, daccord! Exactement!

Each little move, closer to precision, also becomes a move closer from one taster to the others. Becomes a way to move closer to just what the other meant. It seems to be a way of communicating that feels sadly absent from common discourse in our busy culture, these days. Tasting notes dont often fill that void; its that give-and-take thats missing.

One can, and does, find personal disclosure in tasting notes, and I usually find myself really sitting up and paying attention when I encounter that. Some emotion is aroused, some impact is felt, at a more or less deep level. I noticed a note this morning from someone describing a wine from a very well-known and much-heralded German producer as seeming artificial, and complaining that this producers wines have never given him much emotion.

I think I can count on one hand the times, in the past 36 years, that Ive seen tasting-notes that suggest the importance of personal feeling or emotion in the experience of tasting wine. Odd, isnt it? When Ive heard peoples stories about how they became interested in wine, the story almost always includes the tasting of a wine that startled the taster in some powerful way that seemed unexplainable, that seemed to be more than just the way that the wine smelled and tasted good. There was something in the wine that they felt instantly connected to in a way that was not possible to resist or to shut out. Not at all unlike the powerful way that a musical passage, or a great painting might grab you, and not let go. Its the story of a meeting, between the wine, and the taster. Each wine tasted, each sip of each wine, becomes a new meeting.

Its not necessarily a solemn thing; sometimes its anything but. When I first drank good Cru Beaujolais, the incomparably joyous wines the Gamay grape produces in that blessed region, I felt completely seduced. I wanted to take my clothes off. (Perhaps you can see, here, whats behind the wine I call Bone-Jolly, and why I couldnt resist the impulse to plant the Gamay in California, in spite of myself?) It has been, therefore, of considerable interest to discover, recently, a tasting note (though not about Beaujolais) expressing a similar impulse; the wife of the notes author, while drinking the wine (a Riesling from Alsace) begins singing, reciting poetry, and disrobing. Ooh, la la...Exactement!!!

Tried to keep my hands to myself;
They say its a must, but who can you trust?
(copyright 1969, 1997 J.R. Robertson
 
Very nice, Steve.

Actually, I think Coad's notes frequently "suggest the importance of personal feeling or emotion in the experience of tasting wine." Which is one of the reasons I enjoy them so much. But shh, don't tell him, or we'll have fewer postings from Sharon and more from him, and who wants that?

But as long as we're all sharing our thoughts...
 
Talking about how we talk about talking about wine talk! I am joining this Ashram. From now on the only way I think we should "discuss" wine is through colors and a series of tones.

Last night I drank a bottle of 2005 Dominique Mugneret NSG "Les Boudots". It was HAheeeHAAAhheeee with redolent BLUEgreenYellowGreen. It reminded me of BEoooweeeeeBAAAAAH. Drink between now and PURPLE.
 
originally posted by Thor:
Very nice, Steve.

Actually, I think Coad's notes frequently "suggest the importance of personal feeling or emotion in the experience of tasting wine." Which is one of the reasons I enjoy them so much. But shh, don't tell him, or we'll have fewer postings from Sharon and more from him, and who wants that?

But as long as we're all sharing our thoughts...

Nice to know someone doesn't find my efforts useless. Seriously, thanks for that, you've cheered me up a bit after an especially shitty few days. I'll probably just be emailing them to you from now on.
 
originally posted by Chris Coad:
originally posted by Thor:
Very nice, Steve.

Actually, I think Coad's notes frequently "suggest the importance of personal feeling or emotion in the experience of tasting wine." Which is one of the reasons I enjoy them so much. But shh, don't tell him, or we'll have fewer postings from Sharon and more from him, and who wants that?

But as long as we're all sharing our thoughts...

Nice to know someone doesn't find my efforts useless. Seriously, thanks for that, you've cheered me up a bit after an especially shitty few days. I'll probably just be emailing them to you from now on.

BaaahweeeeeBOOOOOOwaaaaa GreenYELLOWblueRED
 
Who gave Perry a Simon game?
Who gave Perry a Simon game today?
Who gave Perry a Simon game today, David?
Who gave Perry a Simon game today, David Bueker?
Who gave Perry a Simon game today, David Bueker, eh?

(sorry, obscure joke)
 
originally posted by Chris Coad:
originally posted by Thor:
Very nice, Steve.

Nice to know someone doesn't find my efforts useless. Seriously, thanks for that, you've cheered me up a bit after an especially shitty few days. I'll probably just be emailing them to you from now on.
I would like to be added to that list. Of course I said buy bank stocks a few months ago.
 
Was it more obscure then the adding of a word like Simon adds a tone & color as part of the game?
If not then it is not really obscure and probably the only joke I've gotten around here...
 
OK, not that obscure. It did require one to know what the game was, though, and I don't want to assume.
 
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