Steven Spielmann
Steven Spielmann
Some folks around here seem to be opposed to tasting notes. I am curious as to your reasons, in a non-confrontational, I-want-to-learn sort of way.
I totally get being opposed to point scores and evaluative language in tasting notes, so if possible let's try to bracket that issue and just concentrate on the following question: what's wrong with trying to discuss your impressions of a wine in part by listing its various qualities?
Granted that if all you are doing is discerning qualities you are missing something, just as the person who goes through a gallery identifying formal techniques in paintings and nothing besides is missing something. On the other hand, the person who goes through a gallery in cheerful ignorance of what the painters are up to formally is probably missing something as well.
I often enjoy reading other people's descriptions of wines I have drunk because it helps me think about the experience and what there was to perceive in it. For example, people might name a scent or taste I recognize with a different word than I would use, and I say, huh, that's interesting, I wonder if that's really closer to what's going on here?
I guess I read tasting notes as something like genuine Haiku, in other words, attempts to give voice to a certain kind of experience.
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In an attempt to start the ball rolling for the opposition, here is one possible principled ground for being opposed to tasting notes. Maybe the thought is that drinking wine is just so context-dependent (on food, company, what other wines one has had, idiosyncracies of palate, etc.) that any attempt to describe such experiences in a way that's meaningful to others is in some way a falsification?
I have trouble seeing how this sort of argument wouldn't undermine all art criticism, however. So I guess if that's the argument I'd like a principled defense of the thesis that it applies to wine but not to the visual, auditory, and narrative arts.
I totally get being opposed to point scores and evaluative language in tasting notes, so if possible let's try to bracket that issue and just concentrate on the following question: what's wrong with trying to discuss your impressions of a wine in part by listing its various qualities?
Granted that if all you are doing is discerning qualities you are missing something, just as the person who goes through a gallery identifying formal techniques in paintings and nothing besides is missing something. On the other hand, the person who goes through a gallery in cheerful ignorance of what the painters are up to formally is probably missing something as well.
I often enjoy reading other people's descriptions of wines I have drunk because it helps me think about the experience and what there was to perceive in it. For example, people might name a scent or taste I recognize with a different word than I would use, and I say, huh, that's interesting, I wonder if that's really closer to what's going on here?
I guess I read tasting notes as something like genuine Haiku, in other words, attempts to give voice to a certain kind of experience.
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In an attempt to start the ball rolling for the opposition, here is one possible principled ground for being opposed to tasting notes. Maybe the thought is that drinking wine is just so context-dependent (on food, company, what other wines one has had, idiosyncracies of palate, etc.) that any attempt to describe such experiences in a way that's meaningful to others is in some way a falsification?
I have trouble seeing how this sort of argument wouldn't undermine all art criticism, however. So I guess if that's the argument I'd like a principled defense of the thesis that it applies to wine but not to the visual, auditory, and narrative arts.