originally posted by Claude Kolm:
originally posted by Levi Dalton:
Sometimes, when a craftsperson's work is dismissed as soulless and indifferent, it is nice to defend the reputation of that work against slander, while acknowledging faults that may exist.
Meaning?
Look, I'm on record for what I think of Franois (and now Antoine) Jobard's wines going back a quarter of a century, and that's based both on repeated visits to the estate and drinking the wines over here, too. I still think they taste great when I see them at the estate. I think that Sharon is off the track, but each to his or her own opinion. For the last several years, I have cellared almost none of Jobard's wines because I cellar virtually no white Burgundy these days (premox and Riesling being the underlying reasons). But I do have enough experience drinking them in Burgundy and elsewhere and going back decades to know that when Jobard's wines are asleep, they can be extremely disappointing, so I don't give a lot of credence to reports from people whom I don't know to have a lot of experience with Jobard's wines. But I am perplexed and more when two of the most knowledgeable people I know with respect to wine, and Burgundy in particular, both of whom have imported Jobard's wines for decades and have abundant experience with them, tell me 180 different experiences with the wines. If you know what I should be thinking about them, I'm all ears (er, eyes), because frankly I'm puzzled and my experiences don't give me enough to incline either way.
So bottom line, I can't say that I see any slander to defend against. If it's a craftsperson's work but is defective, no I don't see anything to defend (especially since I have seen no accusation that it is soulless, just that it is not of quality that appeals to a certain individual).