Joe Dressner
Joe Dressner
I don't really disagree with the overall flexibility and anti-dogma of Thor and David Buecker and lots of the other worthies now writing on our board.
Who really cares?
Wine is concrete. I don't have the same taste or like the same general range of wines that they do. Of course, there is some overlap, but why get caught into all these tedious arguments over winemaking techniques when what we are actually talking about is differences over what wines we actually enjoy.
I have had the privilege over the past 25 years to be roaming the vineyards of France and Italy and have been raised on tasting, evaluating and falling in love with wine in their place of origin. Often, literally in the actual place of terroir. I learned about Brzme by visiting the site and the only remaining vigneron with Eric, not by buying a bottle somewhere in America.
Obviously, everyone cannot do this, although judging from Thor's travelogues on the web he seems to have far more disposable income than I do to tour the world and I don't understand why he complains so much about lack of access and accepts freebies.
I learned about wine from Henri Goyard, Pierre Breton, Marcel Richaud, Jean-Paul Brun, Jean Thevenet, Pierre Overnoy, Marcel Lapierre, Jean-Marie Puzelat, Jean Foillard, Didier Roussel, Marc Olliver, Nady Foucault and what they all taught me was to smell, see, taste and speak the terroir. That my perception was only secondary and incomplete. That I had to learn from the vine.
What I do object is to the verbose internet tasters' subjectivity becoming the definitive guide to evaluating wine. A good taster understands their weaknesses, the incomplete knowledge and their need to always know more and push further. Their is a certain smugness on all these discussions on the board right now which I find arrogant and unfortunate.
Enjoy and dislike what you like. But everyone doesn't have to become a minor Peynaud, Parker or Terry Theise. Try to be at one with the wine, try to melt into the glass. Try to understand that the terroir existed before you did and if the various assholes in all their flexibility and anti-Taliban dogma don't intefere, it will exist long after you are gone.
Long Live Pierre Frick!
From the depths of the New York University Cancer Wards
A Guy Who Has Fought for Natural Viticultural and Winemaking for All His Career
The Former Joe Dressner
Who really cares?
Wine is concrete. I don't have the same taste or like the same general range of wines that they do. Of course, there is some overlap, but why get caught into all these tedious arguments over winemaking techniques when what we are actually talking about is differences over what wines we actually enjoy.
I have had the privilege over the past 25 years to be roaming the vineyards of France and Italy and have been raised on tasting, evaluating and falling in love with wine in their place of origin. Often, literally in the actual place of terroir. I learned about Brzme by visiting the site and the only remaining vigneron with Eric, not by buying a bottle somewhere in America.
Obviously, everyone cannot do this, although judging from Thor's travelogues on the web he seems to have far more disposable income than I do to tour the world and I don't understand why he complains so much about lack of access and accepts freebies.
I learned about wine from Henri Goyard, Pierre Breton, Marcel Richaud, Jean-Paul Brun, Jean Thevenet, Pierre Overnoy, Marcel Lapierre, Jean-Marie Puzelat, Jean Foillard, Didier Roussel, Marc Olliver, Nady Foucault and what they all taught me was to smell, see, taste and speak the terroir. That my perception was only secondary and incomplete. That I had to learn from the vine.
What I do object is to the verbose internet tasters' subjectivity becoming the definitive guide to evaluating wine. A good taster understands their weaknesses, the incomplete knowledge and their need to always know more and push further. Their is a certain smugness on all these discussions on the board right now which I find arrogant and unfortunate.
Enjoy and dislike what you like. But everyone doesn't have to become a minor Peynaud, Parker or Terry Theise. Try to be at one with the wine, try to melt into the glass. Try to understand that the terroir existed before you did and if the various assholes in all their flexibility and anti-Taliban dogma don't intefere, it will exist long after you are gone.
Long Live Pierre Frick!
From the depths of the New York University Cancer Wards
A Guy Who Has Fought for Natural Viticultural and Winemaking for All His Career
The Former Joe Dressner