Oswaldo Costa
Oswaldo Costa
2000 Weinert Malbec Reserva Mendoza 13.5%
100% Malbec. Blackberries, coffee, a touch of rubber and tar. Pleasant acidity, refined tannins, in perfect balance with the attractive fruit. Delicious, and proof positive that Argentina can make fine traditional style wines. This one dates from before Weinert went over to the ripe side. Since almost nobody in Argentina (or Brazil) wants such wines anymore, it costs a third of the price of its velvety supplanters, with their hefty tonnellerie bills to amortize. If you find any prelapsarian Weinert in the forlorn southwestern corner of your wine shop, give it a try.
2007 Los Ecologicos Malbec Uruguay 11.4%
I was intrigued with this inexpensive Uruguayan Malbec that claims to be organic and sports only 11.4% alcohol. Cowabunga! When I got home and studied the label, I noticed, alongside the organic certifications, one from a juvenile diabetes association. Suddenly I was afraid that I had picked up something akin to sugar-free beer, but examination of the website www.losecologicosltda.com revealed that this is vinified completely dry, somehow, so that there is no residual sugar [as for alcohol being itself a complex sugar, Marcia explained to me that insulin is not roused by it in the same manner that it is by less complex sugars]. The site says that they themselves dont understand how the local yeasts manage this feat, but the absence is supposedly lab certified. The taste, alas, while not horrendous, was below the threshold of gourmet acceptability, but I mention its existence in case anyone has diabetic friends or relatives who miss their wine and are willing to compromise on flavor. There is some sweetness in the taste, and I wonder if alcohol, alone, can provide enough of that sensation, or they added some artificial sweetener, who knows.
2006 Polkura Syrah Colchagua Valley 14.8%
92% Syrah, 4% Malbec, 2% Viognier, 2% Tempranillo/Mourvdre/Grenache Noir. Cold soaked, inoculated, and fed. Ripe blackberry and plum, with cocoa and rubber. Has that slightly rancid, mildly putrid aroma that some very ripe wines exhibit. A bit hot, but not too oaky, with good mouth weight. The acid/sweet balance is adequate, but the acidity tastes somewhat separate. Not the worst of its kind, but still no cigar.
So, have I learned anything from the above, besides the existence of sugar-free wine? The Weinert seems to prove that its possible to make, in high altitude desert climates, the kind of wine I like. So why is almost everybody in Chile and Argentina making wine from super ripe grapes? Is that simply their taste? Is it for the $$$, because thats the contemporary taste? Or is the terroir somewhat deterministic, Weinert notwithstanding, forcing them to super mature to avoid immature tannins? Or is it wrongheaded to treat them homogeneously, as if the local variations didnt matter, being trumped by the greater common denominator of high altitude/desert/irrigation, etc.? Maybe only a visit will resolve these doubts, but I am loath to wade through so much purple ink to satisfy a purely intellectual curiosity. Damn, I hate to leave this open.
100% Malbec. Blackberries, coffee, a touch of rubber and tar. Pleasant acidity, refined tannins, in perfect balance with the attractive fruit. Delicious, and proof positive that Argentina can make fine traditional style wines. This one dates from before Weinert went over to the ripe side. Since almost nobody in Argentina (or Brazil) wants such wines anymore, it costs a third of the price of its velvety supplanters, with their hefty tonnellerie bills to amortize. If you find any prelapsarian Weinert in the forlorn southwestern corner of your wine shop, give it a try.
2007 Los Ecologicos Malbec Uruguay 11.4%
I was intrigued with this inexpensive Uruguayan Malbec that claims to be organic and sports only 11.4% alcohol. Cowabunga! When I got home and studied the label, I noticed, alongside the organic certifications, one from a juvenile diabetes association. Suddenly I was afraid that I had picked up something akin to sugar-free beer, but examination of the website www.losecologicosltda.com revealed that this is vinified completely dry, somehow, so that there is no residual sugar [as for alcohol being itself a complex sugar, Marcia explained to me that insulin is not roused by it in the same manner that it is by less complex sugars]. The site says that they themselves dont understand how the local yeasts manage this feat, but the absence is supposedly lab certified. The taste, alas, while not horrendous, was below the threshold of gourmet acceptability, but I mention its existence in case anyone has diabetic friends or relatives who miss their wine and are willing to compromise on flavor. There is some sweetness in the taste, and I wonder if alcohol, alone, can provide enough of that sensation, or they added some artificial sweetener, who knows.
2006 Polkura Syrah Colchagua Valley 14.8%
92% Syrah, 4% Malbec, 2% Viognier, 2% Tempranillo/Mourvdre/Grenache Noir. Cold soaked, inoculated, and fed. Ripe blackberry and plum, with cocoa and rubber. Has that slightly rancid, mildly putrid aroma that some very ripe wines exhibit. A bit hot, but not too oaky, with good mouth weight. The acid/sweet balance is adequate, but the acidity tastes somewhat separate. Not the worst of its kind, but still no cigar.
So, have I learned anything from the above, besides the existence of sugar-free wine? The Weinert seems to prove that its possible to make, in high altitude desert climates, the kind of wine I like. So why is almost everybody in Chile and Argentina making wine from super ripe grapes? Is that simply their taste? Is it for the $$$, because thats the contemporary taste? Or is the terroir somewhat deterministic, Weinert notwithstanding, forcing them to super mature to avoid immature tannins? Or is it wrongheaded to treat them homogeneously, as if the local variations didnt matter, being trumped by the greater common denominator of high altitude/desert/irrigation, etc.? Maybe only a visit will resolve these doubts, but I am loath to wade through so much purple ink to satisfy a purely intellectual curiosity. Damn, I hate to leave this open.