originally posted by Brzme:
originally posted by Levi Dalton:
It is surprising to me that after putting together multiple dinners exploring the subject of orange wines and amphora wines, and having people from around the world come and see how broad and differentiated the wines can be, that one still hears things like "all of those wines taste the same" or "that kind of winemaking obliterates terroir expression."
Levi,
I cannot share your enthousiasm for some of these so called natural wines as far as terroir expression is concerned and I don't think I am one of these natural winemaker hunters you find on a lot of wine boards especially in France.
But I'll try to explain my personnal trouble with some of these wines regarding terroir expression.
To me, they seem to be part of the late Baroque aesthetic movement : Very luxious style I would call "noisy" : the noise of ornamentation is much bigger, for my palate of course, than the core signal of terroir.
I discussed above this with F. Cornelissen in London last year, and he was very clear about being bored by focused precise wine like say Clos Saint Hune. He described me DRC wines as poor in sensation for his taste, too monodimensional. So where I see some razor sharp precision of terroir expression without any "noisy" signal, FC sees monastic austerity far from the abundant sensations his instinct tells him that a wine should show.
And in my mind this "noise of taste" is usually very typical of the winemaker, the technique and the grape expression through terroir.
Morgon is the the place I know the best for illustrating this :
The wine from foillard or lapierre are more baroque to me than the ones from descombes or thevenet (when not spoiled by brett) themselves still more "noisy" than the ones from chamonard which is the epitome of Morgon terroir expression for my taste (though probably the more "natural" especially in terms of SO2 use).
But foillard is obviously no fleurie nor chiroubles. And though typical of nauport interpretation of Chauvet, typically gamay for beaujolais. So no way in my mind these wines, as long as they not fucked by lazy winemaking, are so "noisy" that the terroir signal is totally burried in the noise.
I drink as much foillard as descombes or chamonard - quite a bit in fact.
And with a lot of pleasure but I really don't see any of the Baroque wines as a text book terroir driven morgon, if you want to dig deeply into the very detailed nuances of the terroir in Morgon, like Chamonard definitely is.
Should the chase of these nuances the ultimate goal of wine appreciation?
Well everyone has his own answer, and I really don't see why I cannot say that I have the feeling that a lot of these supranatural wines are too loose in term of precision for my poor little palate to decode, in nuances, the terroir signal.
Which doesn't mean they all taste the same or are all atypical of their provenance. But a lot are, like for any kind of wine, natural or not.
Bonne anne tous
Eric