Steven Spielmann
Steven Spielmann
There is a clear ideal of non-interventionist winemaking which many terroir-expressive and palatable burgundies do not live up to. I think that we should not blur the lines between these two things; x can be good and y can be good even if x and y are not the same. A strong preference for x over y can nonetheless be rationally permissible; I commit no sin against reason by strongly preferring Classical string quartets to Romantic operas even while acknowledging that both have many merits, for instance.
If we need to intervene in some cases to bring out terroir, that might be a strike against non-interventionist winemaking. It certainly would be for some people since one argument for non-interventionist winemaking is that many forms of heavy intervention efface terroir. If terroir-expression is the goal then non-interventionist winemaking is only justified when it contributes to expressing terroir, and it may be that good traditional winemakers in great regions in fact simply know how to intervene well. (Although I do not believe it, I once heard it said that the so-called international style was simply the right way to get good terroir expression in stronger vintages of Pomerol.)
On the other hand, non-intervention itself might be the goal. Grapes and grapes alone, not the honey we make into mead nor the grain we make into beer, can become a delicious fermented beverage without adding anything to them. They bring their own yeast and sugar to the process and can support it all themselves, at least in ideal circumstances. We might believe that the process where the winemaker chooses only the picking date, whether or not to include stems, how much to crush, how long to let the grapes stay in contact with their skins, and how long to let them sit in glass or stone after they ferment (wood being too much of a flavor contributor, perhaps, to be countenanced in the end) before people drink them, is the one most worthy of admiration and being experienced, terroir which cannot come out in this way be damned.
I think that we should not pretend that certain things are not interventions because they are time-honored or make contributions to terroir expression (or big fruit, smooth texture, whatever else). And likewise, bad winemaking decisions that obscure terroir or make a wine less palatable are not ipso facto interventions in the sense of the ideal under discussion. Terroir expression and nonintervention are two separate values, often allies perhaps in a realm deluged with spoofulated industrial swill, but not for that reason conceptually equivalent nor coextensive in fact.
If we need to intervene in some cases to bring out terroir, that might be a strike against non-interventionist winemaking. It certainly would be for some people since one argument for non-interventionist winemaking is that many forms of heavy intervention efface terroir. If terroir-expression is the goal then non-interventionist winemaking is only justified when it contributes to expressing terroir, and it may be that good traditional winemakers in great regions in fact simply know how to intervene well. (Although I do not believe it, I once heard it said that the so-called international style was simply the right way to get good terroir expression in stronger vintages of Pomerol.)
On the other hand, non-intervention itself might be the goal. Grapes and grapes alone, not the honey we make into mead nor the grain we make into beer, can become a delicious fermented beverage without adding anything to them. They bring their own yeast and sugar to the process and can support it all themselves, at least in ideal circumstances. We might believe that the process where the winemaker chooses only the picking date, whether or not to include stems, how much to crush, how long to let the grapes stay in contact with their skins, and how long to let them sit in glass or stone after they ferment (wood being too much of a flavor contributor, perhaps, to be countenanced in the end) before people drink them, is the one most worthy of admiration and being experienced, terroir which cannot come out in this way be damned.
I think that we should not pretend that certain things are not interventions because they are time-honored or make contributions to terroir expression (or big fruit, smooth texture, whatever else). And likewise, bad winemaking decisions that obscure terroir or make a wine less palatable are not ipso facto interventions in the sense of the ideal under discussion. Terroir expression and nonintervention are two separate values, often allies perhaps in a realm deluged with spoofulated industrial swill, but not for that reason conceptually equivalent nor coextensive in fact.