Here's my commentary and note from the last bottle I opened, along with the wine's chemistry:
So I'm a big fan of less interventionist / more natural methods both in the vineyard and in the winery. Without opening the can of worms regarding what that means, let me say, though, that less is not always more, as evinced by a wine I opened today.
The nose was best characterized as hot pickle juice celery candy. Did I mention the pickles? Can you say wicked VA? Spritzy, thin, green and weedy on the palate. Comments from three experienced tasters at the table included "some terrible 5-10 year old CA whole cluster pinot disaster that is going off in the bottle," "god this is awful, it's so hot and stewed it's gotta be from CA," "maybe it's some f*cked up super ancient winemaking disaster from Italy or Croatia," "maybe there is some version of that disaster in Spain?"
The wine in question:
- 2006 Frank Cornelissen Etna Contadino 4Italy, Sicily, Etna DOC (9/1/2009)
This isn't natural winemaking, this is a trainwreck. The amount of sediment isn't "the product of natural methods" it's a product of "not racking clean." This wine is hot, stewed, weedy, and features the most VA of any wine I've ever had. And that is before you taste it. On the palate it is tart, pickled and super green, while maintaining the heat. Hurts to swallow. One of the worst wines I've ever purchased, this shouldn't be considered a commercially acceptable product. (50 pts.)
Posted from CellarTracker
FWIW, Here are the numbers on this beauty:
EtOH: 15.1%
pH: 3.89
TA: 8.10
Malic: .51
gluc/fruc: 3.34 (g/L)
VA: 1.81 (!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!)
Boo-yah.
So I'm a big fan of less interventionist / more natural methods both in the vineyard and in the winery. Without opening the can of worms regarding what that means, let me say, though, that less is not always more, as evinced by a wine I opened today.
The nose was best characterized as hot pickle juice celery candy. Did I mention the pickles? Can you say wicked VA? Spritzy, thin, green and weedy on the palate. Comments from three experienced tasters at the table included "some terrible 5-10 year old CA whole cluster pinot disaster that is going off in the bottle," "god this is awful, it's so hot and stewed it's gotta be from CA," "maybe it's some f*cked up super ancient winemaking disaster from Italy or Croatia," "maybe there is some version of that disaster in Spain?"
The wine in question:
- 2006 Frank Cornelissen Etna Contadino 4Italy, Sicily, Etna DOC (9/1/2009)
This isn't natural winemaking, this is a trainwreck. The amount of sediment isn't "the product of natural methods" it's a product of "not racking clean." This wine is hot, stewed, weedy, and features the most VA of any wine I've ever had. And that is before you taste it. On the palate it is tart, pickled and super green, while maintaining the heat. Hurts to swallow. One of the worst wines I've ever purchased, this shouldn't be considered a commercially acceptable product. (50 pts.)
Posted from CellarTracker
FWIW, Here are the numbers on this beauty:
EtOH: 15.1%
pH: 3.89
TA: 8.10
Malic: .51
gluc/fruc: 3.34 (g/L)
VA: 1.81 (!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!)
Boo-yah.