Steve Edmunds
Steve Edmunds
that strike me as gilding the Lucy!
It is this type of thinking that would deny us the power of categorizations and generalizations. (Can they be abused? Of course. All ideas and words may.)originally posted by Nicolas Mestre:
It is this type of thinking that leads to absurdities like Jean-Paul Brun's L'Ancien being denied AOC status by the INAO.
Food chutes.
I recommend you avoid reading most tasting notes. >:^)originally posted by Nicolas Mestre:
My concern is with the use of a word that qualifies a wine in a manner that is both arbitrary and exclusionary.
This seems surprising to me. But then, I know of only varietal Verdelho in the Loire, so I suppose it shouldn't be.originally posted by VS:
Get really exotic - there's one, and only one, 100% cabernet franc made in Spain - Augustus Cab Franc, from the coastal fringe, right on the Mediterranean, of the Peneds DO in Catalonia. Pretty good actually.
It's just a put-down, the faintest of praise.originally posted by Nicolas Mestre:
It makes me uncomfortable when people refer to wines as "correct."
Please explain what this means, if you would be so kind.
originally posted by Jeff Connell:
Maybe this is the residue of their sexual history ...
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
Horton started going downhill 10 years ago. David's complaint that they make too many wines seemed less the issue with me (they were always experimenting) then that they went seriously mass production.
Nicolas, I've tried the VA wines I've mentioned. I know that Linden's Chard was a poster child for overoaked and maloed for sometime. Even in those years, they became better after 10 years in the bottle. Glen Manor reds are quite processed, less so the whites I think. What others are you talking about?