I knows it when I sees it. Eric on Abe: http://thepour.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/09/09/winemaking-on-the-edge/
originally posted by Florida Jim:
Seth,
I tasted with Abe in July; he makes some very interesting and unusual stuff, most of it with a bit too much alcohol for me
originally posted by Rahsaan:
I just read the Ny Times piece and they quote Abe as saying he is not a big fan of fruit flavors and does his best to banish them from the wine.
originally posted by Florida Jim:
originally posted by Rahsaan:
I just read the Ny Times piece and they quote Abe as saying he is not a big fan of fruit flavors and does his best to banish them from the wine.
Rahasaan,
I must have missed that comment.
I don't think Abe dislikes fruit flavors; he didn't give me that impression at all. He does seem to like complexity, though, and I think he uses that term in its most comprehensive sense. Some oxidative techniques, unusual varieties and sources, skin-contact for some of the whites, etc. It did seem that the winery had lots of experiments going on.
originally posted by VLM:
Hipster winesHipster wines are those that aspire to Clos-Tue-Boeuf in philosophy and appearance, but have no idea how to get their other than to mimic or perform a caricature of them
originally posted by mlawton:
Isn't it simply possible to pull a cork and evaluate the wine based on what comes out of the bottle?
I think more blind tasting (for objective analysis, not juvenile guessing games) is needed.
originally posted by Chris Coad:
I think more blind tasting (for objective analysis, not juvenile guessing games) is needed.
What if one enjoys juvenile guessing games?
I mean, like, a lot...?
Why do elephants wear red sneakers?
originally posted by Chris Coad:
Why do elephants wear red sneakers?
Ooh, ooh, I know that! Wait, something... something about strawberries? Strawberry patch?
originally posted by mlawton:
originally posted by VLM:
Hipster winesHipster wines are those that aspire to Clos-Tue-Boeuf in philosophy and appearance, but have no idea how to get their other than to mimic or perform a caricature of them
How is it possible to know in what spirit a wine was made, when you open a bottle? Do you find that information on the back label?
In all seriousness, do we need to spend so much time focussing on the winemaker's philosophy and goals? Isn't it simply possible to pull a cork and evaluate the wine based on what comes out of the bottle? I think more blind tasting (for objective analysis, not juvenile guessing games) is needed.
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
Nope. The red ones are in the wash!