Cellar goodies

That is, I'm afraid, incorrect as well. It would be true if the alternative, higher-acid/less-ripe wines from the very same appellations were green and underripe. And I suppose by the standards of the 16%ers (that's hyperbole), they are. But by some palates, wines can be and are regularly made from these sites that are not alcohol and Froot™ bombs.

It is, and remains, a grape-growing and winemaking preference, not the insistence of the terroir. Yes, Paso Robles is going to be higher-alcohol and bigger than Anjou, or for that matter the Anderson Valley. But between Tablas Creek and (the late) Garretson there is a very, very wide gulf of possible stylistic decisions, and neither was forced into those decisions by some objective and arbitrary standard of ripeness.
 
To the extent that European wines are superior, it's at least partly because grapes mature slowly, under moderate temperature conditions, with long exposure to daylight. I don't know enough about Australia, but in the torrid Andes, despite all the pre-phyloxera vines and "perfect" weather, ripening is very fast (some organic acids even degrade above 28C). Not to mention that the soil has to be irrigated, so vines are lazy.

I was perhaps overtstating to make a point and agree that there are exceptions (the "old style" wines of Weinert and Bodegas Lopez are good examples) but picking earlier to achieve more balance pays a price in terms of complexity that European wine regions (depite the vagaries) don't have to pay because sugar and seed maturities occur later and are much more likely to coincide.
 
originally posted by Thor:
It is, and remains, a grape-growing and winemaking preference, not the insistence of the terroir.

You may be short, but I am in 100% agreement here.

See also:

originally posted by MLipton:
Where we are on the same page is that judgment of sufficient tannin "ripeness" will always be a subjective call.

For tannin substitute just about anything.

originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
If they really had that choice, then we could, indeed, say that picking later is just a red herring to justify getting the over the top flavors that they know the general coca-cola public craves. But, in many of these climates, the poor geezers simply don't have a choice. If they pick at European levels of sugar maturity, the wines will just taste green and herbaceous - bad to everyone.

What are European levels of maturity?

It really is a choice and "green tannins" and herbaceous "flavors" something or other... [WTF?]

This is a multi-dimensional problem and no one uni-dimensional measurement will get things correct but I am very resistent to the "we have to pick at 28 brix" argument as this is a recent phenomenon with enough historical evidence to the contrary.

There are all sorts of issues like vine planting and latitude, the premier Cte, and IRRIGATION.
 
To the extent that European wines are superior, it's at least partly because grapes mature slowly, under moderate temperature conditions, with long exposure to daylight.
Without engaging the word "superior," that's true as far as it goes, but I really do insist that grower/winemaker choice is the controlling factor in most cases. Look at Alsace, for example, where between Trimbach and Zind Humbrecht there is a wide gulf of any kind of ripeness you'd like to specify. There are fans and detractors of both styles, and I'm not here to adjudicate, but Trimbach is choosing to take (generally) cooler sites and pick them earlier or over a range of dates, while ZH is choosing (generally) hotter sites and choosing to let the grapes hang longer. Since they're (mostly) not working with monopoles, we can see how these choices are reflected in their wines vs. their neighbors' efforts. But to taste a Boxler Brand against a Zind Humbrecht Brand and argue that one or the other was forced into their harvest dates by the demands of the terroir seems ludicrous to me. They chose their definitions of ripeness and picked accordingly, assuming the weather allowed same, and came up with different results.

in the torrid Andes, despite all the pre-phyloxera vines and "perfect" weather, ripening is very fast (some organic acids even degrade above 28C). Not to mention that the soil has to be irrigated, so vines are lazy.
Well, irrigation and soil are worth discussing under separate cover, but I suppose I'm assuming -- perhaps wrongly -- sites with a demonstrable ability to produce manageable ranges of ripeness. If this is always a problem no matter how much knowledge, technology, or money is thrown at the problem, whether in Fresno or on the Rhine plain, then I guess I retreat to the belief that maybe the grapes aren't in the right place, or that they're not the right grapes for the place. Any site can be pushed or pulled to the extremes -- I've had intolerably green and intolerably goopy Chavignol -- but on a site with potential, this isn't the norm.

And yet, of course, the 16%ers (still hyperbole) would insist that reds from that site are never ripe. As Jay Miller (the bad one) and his fans have in fact insisted. I presume some Sancerrois might say in return that Kosta Browne's wines are always overripe, but I haven't asked.

picking earlier to achieve more balance pays a price in terms of complexity that European wine regions (depite the vagaries) don't have to pay because sugar and seed maturities occur later and are much more likely to coincide.
I think this narrows the longitudinal definition of "Europe" rather dramatically, don't you? I've already brought up Alsace, and that's quite northerly. Move into southern Italy, or much of Spain and Portugal, or for that matter southern France, and it seems to me that the choices aren't all that different. I've tasted plenty that had lost any acidity, plenty where the tannin never abandoned astringency, plenty where the fruit was pushed into the syrup stage, plenty that never got to a stage in which fruit was expressed, and plenty at every stage in-between those extremes. Perhaps Victor could weigh in here. But I suspect that "October, November, or December?" as they might ask in Juranon is not a question he has to worry about.
 
originally posted by Thor:
To the extent that European wines are superior, it's at least partly because grapes mature slowly, under moderate temperature conditions, with long exposure to daylight.
Without engaging the word "superior," that's true as far as it goes, but I really do insist that grower/winemaker choice is the controlling factor in most cases. Look at Alsace, for example, where between Trimbach and Zind Humbrecht there is a wide gulf of any kind of ripeness you'd like to specify. There are fans and detractors of both styles, and I'm not here to adjudicate, but Trimbach is choosing to take (generally) cooler sites and pick them earlier or over a range of dates, while ZH is choosing (generally) hotter sites and choosing to let the grapes hang longer. Since they're (mostly) not working with monopoles, we can see how these choices are reflected in their wines vs. their neighbors' efforts. But to taste a Boxler Brand against a Zind Humbrecht Brand and argue that one or the other was forced into their harvest dates by the demands of the terroir seems ludicrous to me. They chose their definitions of ripeness and picked accordingly, assuming the weather allowed same, and came up with different results.

in the torrid Andes, despite all the pre-phyloxera vines and "perfect" weather, ripening is very fast (some organic acids even degrade above 28C). Not to mention that the soil has to be irrigated, so vines are lazy.
Well, irrigation and soil are worth discussing under separate cover, but I suppose I'm assuming -- perhaps wrongly -- sites with a demonstrable ability to produce manageable ranges of ripeness. If this is always a problem no matter how much knowledge, technology, or money is thrown at the problem, whether in Fresno or on the Rhine plain, then I guess I retreat to the belief that maybe the grapes aren't in the right place, or that they're not the right grapes for the place. Any site can be pushed or pulled to the extremes -- I've had intolerably green and intolerably goopy Chavignol -- but on a site with potential, this isn't the norm.

And yet, of course, the 16%ers (still hyperbole) would insist that reds from that site are never ripe. As Jay Miller (the bad one) and his fans have in fact insisted. I presume some Sancerrois might say in return that Kosta Browne's wines are always overripe, but I haven't asked.

picking earlier to achieve more balance pays a price in terms of complexity that European wine regions (depite the vagaries) don't have to pay because sugar and seed maturities occur later and are much more likely to coincide.
I think this narrows the longitudinal definition of "Europe" rather dramatically, don't you? I've already brought up Alsace, and that's quite northerly. Move into southern Italy, or much of Spain and Portugal, or for that matter southern France, and it seems to me that the choices aren't all that different. I've tasted plenty that had lost any acidity, plenty where the tannin never abandoned astringency, plenty where the fruit was pushed into the syrup stage, plenty that never got to a stage in which fruit was expressed, and plenty at every stage in-between those extremes. Perhaps Victor could weigh in here. But I suspect that "October, November, or December?" as they might ask in Juranon is not a question he has to worry about.
 
You can apply to what you've said to grapes grown here and wines made in Napa, Sonoma, Santa Barbara, Paso Robles, etc. I remember an Albarino from grapes grown here in Napa and the wine from them made by Michael Havens. The wine had high acid and I remember Michael telling me how surprised he was by the acid content & balance.I'm sure Brad kane would remember the wine. In fact Michael told me the other day he's going to release another Albarino in a short while. The labeling hasn't been determined yet.
 
This argument never gets too old does it?

There was a time, or so I have been told, where California did produce lower alcohol, restrained wines with finesse. Back when they were looking for parity and recognition with their European breathern. This was achieved more or less but the market wanted or was created for stand-up wines. Americans drink wine to this day like they drink vodka. That's where the market is and as long as winemakers need to eat they are going to follow the markets.

Global warming notwithstanding, California could produce those '70's wines again, if that's what the market wants. Physical maturity, phenolic ripeness, its all hyperbole catering to ITB types and a handful of wine geeks - who cares?

Evangelize what you like and enjoy it everyday.
 
originally posted by VLM:What are European levels of maturity?

Classically, it's the point where sugar stops accumulating as a result of photosynthesis and begins to accumulate as a result of concentration (evaporation of water). Also known as technological maturity (ugly term).

originally posted by VLM:It really is a choice and "green tannins" and herbaceous "flavors".

Andean winegrowers claim that if they pick at classic European levels the sugar will be right but the tannins will be green and herbaceous. As a result, they say that they have to wait until the tannins are ripe, at which point the sugar will have concentrated and the wines will have high alcohol and low acid.

originally posted by VLM:This is a multi-dimensional problem and no one uni-dimensional measurement will get things correct but I am very resistent to the "we have to pick at 28 brix" argument as this is a recent phenomenon with enough historical evidence to the contrary.

Agreed, I don't think I or anyone is suggesting that picking should be done at a specific sugar level. I visited Luca Roagna in October and he said that, on the contrary, he picks based on seed maturity, not Babo. In normal Piemontese years, the two maturities coincide, so it's not an issue. But in 2003, he said to illustrate his point, growers who picked based on Babo made bad/unripe wine because, in effect, Europe behaved in 2003 like the New World does every year. In 2003, waiting for the seeds to ripen fully (as one had to do) resulted in high sugar concentrations, hence the fruit bombs playing in theaters everywhere.
 
Thor, lots of great points, and good reprimands for my generalizations, but I think my overall point got lost in ths shuffle. Alsace is not a counter-argument to what I was saying, it is support. By European, I meant the classic places, cold in winter, with long growing seasons. Some European regions are hot and can behave more like New World regions, but that doesn't negate the argument as far as the classic regions. I don't know enough about California, but in Chile and Argentina, the lightning fast maturations tend to generate less choices.

But I think you hit on where I am ultimately trying to go: "the belief that maybe the grapes aren't in the right place, or that they're not the right grapes for the place." Precisely. When New World winegrowers make this kind of "mistake," they have to choose between mature tannins with too much sugar or correct acid/sugar balance with immature tannins. Not much of a choice.

I am generalizing and being somewhat manichean to make a point, and understand that reality is more nuanced and less polarized.
 
originally posted by JasonA:
The dead horseTGlobal warming notwithstanding, California could produce those '70's wines again, if that what the market wants.
Not only could they, there still are some that do, just not the ones that get all the hype.
 
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
I am generalizing and being somewhat manichean to make a point, and understand that reality is more nuanced and less polarized.
And you are also still missing Thor's point: climate is not destiny.
 
Alsace is not a counter-argument to what I was saying, it is support.
Perhaps this will no longer surprise you, but I don't really agree. Especially now, with climate change, there is a real question about whether or not certain formerly-lauded site and grape combinations are sustainable. One can choose, for example, to pick Furstentum gewurztraminer early and preserve balance at the expense of complexity, or let it hang and end up making something indistinguishable from a fortified dessert wine. Not every year, but often enough that there's concern. There are producers who make both choices, and producers who make many in-between choices as well. So Alsace, and it is not alone, must face the same sugar/non-sugar ripeness choice as other regions.

Your original point was on the difference between picking by sugar (thus assuming other forms of ripeness) vs. alternative standards, and explaining how one was a European model that didn't apply as well to hotter New World sites. I'm trying to point out that it doesn't work in the Old World sites either, that the best growers are still picking by taste more than analysis, and that the conditions of that taste are based on an array of aesthetic choices that are influenced by, but most definitely not controlled by, the terroir.

In other words, an Alsatian grower can no more let their Furstentum gewurztraminer hang to an arbitrary number than can those who buy Pisoni pinot noir. Both are faced with a choice. And both result in producers making different choices from the set of same available to them, which exist as a disproof of "can/can't" assessments of the terroirs in question. If Arcadian and Cargasacchi make a hypothetical wine from the same site, and they're both "quality" wines (by which I mean not flawed), but they're 3% apart in potential alcohol and taste nothing alike, then I'm dubious (to say the least) about claims from either Joe Davis or Peter Cargasacchi that they are simply making the wines the site has forced them to make. They aren't. They've chosen to make wine based on their very different standards about what constitutes the best expression of that site. I suspect, and evidence will bear this out, that these standards will be expressed across the range of sites from which they make grapes. That's not terroir forcing their hands. That's them, in full control of their hands.

So when you wrote in your original post (edited for clarity, and emphasis mine):

If hot climate growers pick based on sugar, the tannins would still be green, so they have to wait until the seeds are mature. But, by that point, sugar will have accumulated beyond the traditional European point (technological maturity), generating jammy wines with tons of alcohol that have to be acidified. These wines are what they are not so much because of stylistic preference but because their climate imposes it.

...it's "they have to," "will," and "their climate imposes it" that I object to. None of the three is true if counter-examples exist. And in most cases, they do. If no counter-examples exist despite efforts having been made, then I'll accept the case. But my own experience suggests that, among high-quality wines (thus excluding bulk and ultra-commercial stuff), this is far more the exception than it is the rule.

By European, I meant the classic places, cold in winter, with long growing seasons.
Man, that excludes an awful lot of places I'd hate to exclude from "classic." I mean, what should we dismiss? Bandol? Collioure? Jerez? Taurasi? The Douro? Help me out, here.

It seems to me that you want to define the highest quality wines as coming from sites that fit your above criteria, and I suspect you'd find a lot of agreement from like-minded folk (probably even me), but I think you have to recognize that it's your own preferences speaking, not an immutable natural rule.

I don't know enough about California, but in Chile and Argentina, the lightning fast maturations tend to generate less choices.
Sure, of course they allow a narrow range of choices. It's worth pointing out, though, that so do the long, slow, cool sites...except that there, it's a different narrow range; Raveneau can't pick a month before their neighbors and made their best wine.

I, in turn, probably don't know enough about South American viticulture to comment on the specifics down there. But I do know that in California, Australia, and some of Europe's hotter areas, "I'm forced to make wine this way" is pretty often shown to be very much not the case. Steve Edmunds has made somewhat of a career out of it, for example, and he's hardly alone, though he and his like-minded compatriots may be the minority.

I agree with you that there are a lot of grapes that are badly-sited and thus fall victim, vintage after vintage, to this problem of wildly variant ripening curves. In fact, that's true at both ends of the climate scale. And maybe the sites you're referring to in Argentina and Chile really can't make wine any other way...you'd know better than I would whether or not there are expressions that demonstrate potential alternatives. But as a worldwide generalization, even an Old World/New World generalization, I just don't think it holds up very well.

When New World winegrowers make this kind of "mistake," they have to choose between mature tannins with too much sugar or correct acid/sugar balance with immature tannins.
Yes, but now we're starting with a case in which we already acknowledge that an agricultural mistake has been made, like trying to grow olive trees in Qubec. That doesn't really work for me as more than a thought exercise, because no one who consumes or talks about olive oil is actually engaged in a world in which Qubcois oil rises to a level of consideration. Maybe it will, someday. But we've got evidence that quality wine can be made on the Central Coast of California, and yet a fury of heat and debate about what it can/should/must taste like. The choices made by the producers there exist, and are not identical, and are thus a real world case demonstrating this tension between ripenesses that we can discuss. That, to me, is more interesting and tangible.
 
And you are also still missing Thor's point: climate is not destiny.
Having been supported, I'm going to demur a bit: it may be destiny, and until we've got grenache from Antarctica I'll stick to that argument. But I think that if we restrict our consideration to the regions of the world from which widely-acknowledged quality wines (of whatever style) have been made, the generalizations fray.
 
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
I am generalizing and being somewhat manichean to make a point, and understand that reality is more nuanced and less polarized.
And you are also still missing Thor's point: climate is not destiny.

Climate determines the parameters within which winemakers can operate. The more extreme the climate, the narrower the parameters.
 
Thor, OK. I am not defending a position acquired through personal winemaking experience in the Andes, so it's vulnerable. If what Andean winemakers claim about their own terroir is true, then they have much less choice than we think, and have to make the sort of wine they make (or make more balanced wines that cannot ever achieve sufficient complexity because of shorter hang times). You are making a forceful argument that what they say is not credible, because there are counter-examples, plus it's getting warmer everywhere, so everyone is increasingly faced with the same condundrums. If so, then what Nathan says is true, it's a red herring. Fine. I would love nothing more than have the Chileans and Argentineans proved wrong and begin to see naturally balanced and organoleptically complex wines come from there. So far, I haven't tasted any, but I will continue to look for them.

PS: the five regions you mentioned are all capable of good table wines, but I don't see them as classic (Douro and Jerez are classic, of course, but for fortified wines; Bandol is classic for ros, but hardly overall). But I agree completely about my preferences speaking, and about the tautological nature of some of my statements, that could have been more thoughtfully put. But exchanging posts has the spontaneity of conversation. And statements can be generally true despite counter-examples, but I don't want to be argumentative.
 
Oswaldo, I share Rahsaan's dismay at the lack of desire for extended argumentation. Are you sure you've come to the right forum?

You are making a forceful argument that what they say is not credible, because there are counter-examples
I didn't know that for sure, but assuming that there are, then the producers of late-harvested (and then, I presume, adjusted) wines cannot legitimately claim that they have no (or extremely limited) choices. They do. And if they truly don't, then -- as we've discussed -- they do not have the right grapes in the right places.

PS: the five regions you mentioned are all capable of good table wines, but I don't see them as classic (Douro and Jerez are classic, of course, but for fortified wines; Bandol is classic for ros, but hardly overall).
Boy, I couldn't agree less with you re: Bandol, and Collioure's best table wines are better (even if they're not more famous) than its fortified wines, and Taurasi is certainly classic by any definition yet non-fortified. But my argument was that you were narrowing "Europe" to "classic Europe" to "classic cool-winter long-season Europe," and that I didn't agree with your increasingly narrowed definition of "classic." You wrote:

By European, I meant the classic places, cold in winter, with long growing seasons.
...and that's just wrong. In fact, it's not even close to right. That's only a portion of what's "classic" in Europe.
 
Goddamitt, I lost sleep last night ruminating about this thread!

Classic, to me, means Alsace, Loire, and Germany/Austria for whites, Burgundy for both, and Bordeaux, Northern Rhone, CdP, Piedmont, Tuscany and Rioja for reds. One may quibble about this one or that one, but I think that's basically it. I just don't see southern Italian wines as classic, though they have tradition. They and many other places (Jura, Loire reds, the rest of the southern Rhone, etc.) are capable of making sensational wines, wines I love dearly, but they are not what I would call classic, i.e., what your average Joe/Juan/Jos/Josef/Jean recognizes as such.

I vote for "they do not have the right grapes in the right places." Or a more extreme version, such as "no right grapes have been found so far for such places." They can make less balanced wines with longer hang times or more balanced wines with shorter hang times, but they cannot make balanced wines with long hang times.
 
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