Oswaldo Costa
Oswaldo Costa
originally posted by SFJoe:
First of all, none of those wines are reduced. Reduced wines smell of sulfides, of thiols, of rotten eggs and cabbages and rubber. Or they hint at that direction but are nonetheless glorious, say a young Paris Geynale of my recent experience.
I almost wrote in my response that even though I understand the oxidative state to be a reductive state, the reduction of the oxidative state has nothing to do, aromatically, with the smells we call reductive. But I thought that would be too digressive. And there you go starting your response like this!
Thanks for the rest, though, the understanding of which will require the application of whatever neurons remain unoxidised. But I don't think you addressed the point about oxidative being a reduced state (unless that was it above). Where I got this I don't recall; I think it was in a previous thread here. Will have to use the search function. Maybe it was Mark who said it?
Brad, though I have no problem (anymore) with mild oxidativeness, there is so much blog fare out there saying to decant CdS for a full day or two that, yes, I thought it that aroma would become less intense with aeration, since a reductive state will supposedly clear with oxygen. But it was already oxidised, so aeration only made it worse.
Richard Leroy says his wines sometimes smell oxidative on opening, and lose that after a few ours (or a day) in a decanter. He fully believes in the oxidative/oxidised difference. SFJoe has naysaid that in a previous thread, in the manner described above, rendering me in two. Alas, to my meager understanding, it makes perfect sense that a reductive state would protect a wine from oxidation simply because exposure to oxygen would be absorbed in the transition from oxidative to "normal" before it can actually start damaging the wine.