From an interview with Anselme Selosse we have just published in elmundovino:
"What can you tell me about acidity?"
"In my opinion, in Champagne we are absolutely wrong when we identify acidity as the cause for freshness in a wine. In Spanish wines there's little acidity, but there is sapidity, a word which comes from the Latin 'sapor', taste. I adore what the palomino grape shows in Jerez with that salty, umami side, that sapidity, that saline character which comes from the limestone subsoil. And I love the mouthfeel it brings, which is refreshing. There's minerality, so there's no need for acidity. When I taste great Spanish wines, I have the sensation that the mineral, even metallic, part often comes to the fore. The wines are not acid and therefore they are not hard, so that they become elegant."
"And you like the palomino grape?"
"Yes, I even believe it would be good to make a bubbly with it."
"What can you tell me about acidity?"
"In my opinion, in Champagne we are absolutely wrong when we identify acidity as the cause for freshness in a wine. In Spanish wines there's little acidity, but there is sapidity, a word which comes from the Latin 'sapor', taste. I adore what the palomino grape shows in Jerez with that salty, umami side, that sapidity, that saline character which comes from the limestone subsoil. And I love the mouthfeel it brings, which is refreshing. There's minerality, so there's no need for acidity. When I taste great Spanish wines, I have the sensation that the mineral, even metallic, part often comes to the fore. The wines are not acid and therefore they are not hard, so that they become elegant."
"And you like the palomino grape?"
"Yes, I even believe it would be good to make a bubbly with it."