originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by SFJoe:
Can someone who works a vineyard actually think this? Without a definition of "micro-climate" that is so expansive as to take in everything else?originally posted by VLM:
Peter Cargasacchi ...
(and he thinks terroir as we see it is vodoo, it's all micro-climate to him).
It comes down to the fact that there is no known pathway for "minerals" and such to get from the soil to the wine.
All of the things we attribute to terroir are just things that change drainage, heat retention, etc.
It's a defensible position and I think the burden of proof about "mineral" uptake is probably on those of us who might think it's true.
I had assumed I was a terroir type, but maybe not if it necessitates thinking that one can taste the minerals a vine is planted in in the wine from that vine. That sounds like homology to me. It's not merely that there is no known pathway. Really there's no reason to posit such a pathway.
That doesn't mean that minerals in terroir don't affect quite directly the flavor of wine, of course. All one needs to do is to eliminate the word "just" from VLM's penultimate sentence. If believing those things are enough to define differences in the flavor of wine down to the vineyard isn't enough to justify the word terroir, then I guess I don't qualify.
I distinguish between terroir and microclimate because the word terroir in French (and therefore in English, as far as I'm concerned) also denotes different cultural practices and I think that is also part of wine (see endless threads on defining spoofulation).
I don't know that I'm handing out types here, but I think that I want to be a terroirist but I would also like to have the facts on my side, not just a dreamy alternate reality.
I'm of course, as an ignorant lit. type
Don't be so dramatic.