originally posted by SteveTimko:
I'm lostHow exactly does removing the name of the grape stress the terroir?
Riesling, for instance, is the pure terroir grape. I think the terroir would be diminished without riesling on the label.
originally posted by David M. Bueker:
I was in a wine shop the other day & while browsing the Alsace section the proprietor ushered me to the Deiss wines & asked why such amazing wines did not sell. My response: "because they're crap" did not go over so well.
They're grossly imbalanced towards fat, they rarely reflect their terroir (being overwhelmed by their Deiss house signature, which rather defeats their alleged and much-hyped point), they're clumsy, they don't age very well (or sometimes at all), and for all this one is asked to pay a rather stiff tariff.What's the general beef with Deiss's wines?
originally posted by Thor:
They're grossly imbalanced towards fat, they rarely reflect their terroir (being overwhelmed by their Deiss house signature, which rather defeats their alleged and much-hyped point), they're clumsy, they don't age very well (or sometimes at all), and for all this one is asked to pay a rather stiff tariff.What's the general beef with Deiss's wines?
Other than that, they're great. Very pretty labels. Strong glass. Nice bottle shape. And JM Deiss makes a very compelling -- well, lengthy -- argument for why he's super-duper-talented in ways that none of his neighbors are. What's not to like about that? Unless, I guess, you're one of said neighbors...