Joel Stewart
Joel Stewart
I had a wine last night that I've had before. Last night's was the non-sulphured version. The one before was sulphured. Though completely drinkable, this one (in my mind) could not be recognized as the same wine as the sulphured version, and I prefer the sulphured. Why? Because A) this wine tasted thinner, more astringent and, most importantly, brettier...and B) this wine tasted like other producer's wines in similar winemaking circumstances, even with different grapes. In other words, to my limited experience, there is a sameness here that is over-riding the diffs between producers, plots (even regions) and seemingly, the grapes themselves. Would that sameness be due to vineyard and cellar microbes that wait in the wings for such a low or non SO2 chance, to dive into the wine and make it their own?
(Note: edited for hopefully more clarity)
(Note: edited for hopefully more clarity)