Back to 1919 or 1921, in fact.originally posted by Yixin:
They are sold out of 2010 secs. They still have demi- and moelleux from multiple vintages available, including 1er trie.
Christian,originally posted by Christian Miller (CMM):
Economically speaking, selling to fewer and larger buyers generally puts downward pressure on a winery's prices, not upwards. Of course, those larger distributors might just jack up their margins if they think the market will bear it, so retail prices can still increase. But when you have a famous property of limited production, renowned for quality, the commercially savvier thing to do IMHO is to spread your risk and limit your buyers' leverage by having more of them. Cult wines that are mostly or all sold by mailing list are the ultimate version of this.
originally posted by SFJoe:
But careless of Tony.
I am guessing, and didn't taste with them at the fair, but it's getting hard to make Vouvray sec in these post-1990 days, particularly if you have good sites and moderate yields. Too much potential, and it will either be sugar or alcohol.
Oh, lordy, say what you will about Tony, that doesn't seem to be his M.O. anywhere.originally posted by Brad Kane:
originally posted by SFJoe:
But careless of Tony.
I am guessing, and didn't taste with them at the fair, but it's getting hard to make Vouvray sec in these post-1990 days, particularly if you have good sites and moderate yields. Too much potential, and it will either be sugar or alcohol.
You bring up a good point, Joe. My nightmare scenario in all this is that to control alcohol levels in the sec in the future, reverse osmosis and spinning cones may find it's way into the cellar.
originally posted by pab:
.
But it's a different winemaking : low yield (prices must grow-up fast), malolactique done and long elevage with wood.
originally posted by pab:
You're wrong as usual... Parker doesn't come enought in Loire. That's a pity for the winemaker and the business and the main reason of the low prices and the main reason of the Loire structural crisis (like Côte Rôtie or Ch“teauneuf-du-Pape 20-30 years ago).
Best regards
pierre-alain
originally posted by SFJoe:
Roumier
originally posted by Brézème:
Maybe I'd better write in french and use first degree humour...
Really Parker? The solution for Loire wines? Fuck, I still have to learn...
Ah, yes, Stéphane Cossais the prophet of Montlouis, saved the world according to Pierre-Alain Benoit. Except Stéphane knew that he was working in a vineyard that had potential for Montlouis sec. If he had access to another vineyard, he might have made a different wine.originally posted by pab:
About sec, I don't understand why it should be impossible ? Stéphane Cossais did it in Montlouis (2001-2007) and produced very singing wines.
originally posted by Jeff Connell:
François Chidaine sees le Clos Baudoin as a vineyard for Vouvray Sec
originally posted by SFJoe:
...it's getting hard to make Vouvray sec in these post-1990 days, particularly if you have good sites and moderate yields. Too much potential, and it will either be sugar or alcohol.
originally posted by SFJoe:
More leaves give more photosynthetic energy to the plant, so hastening ripening, OTBE.
Crop load is another factor--harder to ripen a bigger crop.
If you find yourself picking in August, you may not have had the hang time you want to get the flavors you'd seek in a sec.originally posted by .sasha:
originally posted by SFJoe:
More leaves give more photosynthetic energy to the plant, so hastening ripening, OTBE.
Crop load is another factor--harder to ripen a bigger crop.
and so, as you well know, the question of higher yields has come up in Germany in an attempt to make a true Kabinett
but can the counterintuitive work, i.e. can lower yields actually give you an opportunity to pick earlier and make a Sec, or is that the sort of thing that will only work one out of ten times, since there are other variables involved