originally posted by Peter Creasey:
This has been a thesis point for Dan Berger for quite some time.
He certainly paints with a broad brush, but that doesn't mean that the subject isn't worthy of a gymnasium-sized mural instead of a meticulous painting the size of a wine label.
Although I don't drink much of it any more, old school Cabernet Sauvignon still exists; even in Napa Valley you've got people such as Mayacamas, Ritchie Creek, Smith-Madrone, and Tudal (mentioned in the article) making wine in what might be considered the traditional style. Alcohol levels have crept up over the years but the wines still tend toward savory sensations and they reward aging. They don't get lots of points from most of the reviewers but I'm not seeing any of these wines on any of the wine closeout emails that
still flood my inbox daily.
Besides, it sounds like Berger pays attention to the prognostications and hard facts divined by Christian Miller so he's probably correct in his assertion that drinkable Cabernet in general is going to hell in a handbasket.
As to the contention that the fatuous and vapid nature of much modern-day Cabernet has led to the increased popularity of Pinot Noir, I think that
that's more about the popularity of "Sideways" among the wine lifestyle people than it is them having had a come to Jesus moment with a bottle of Bryant Family or Screaming Eagle and realizing that it wasn't a fulfilling experience. So too was the uptick in Merlot sales back in the 1990s- that wasn't due to consumers getting fed up with high futures prices for Bordeaux but because "60 Minutes" told everyone that they should drink red wine to improve their health and "Mair-low" was easier (and more fun) to pronounce than "Cab-ur-nay-saw-vinyawn". Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar.
-Eden (just wondering why Dan B didn't proffer any solutions to the problem. Whingeing is all well and good, but where's his Call To Action, his Manifesto of Change, his nomination for a Moses-like figure to lead the innocents out of the desert?)(or the dessert, if they're drinking really frooty/sweet cabs)