Thanks for the interest in the subject, guys. All the points you make are interesting and most are valid, but of course none of them address the very specific allegation by the noted scientist, John Gilman, which justifies the title of this thread. Gilman writes about the new venture by my colleague and friend, Gerry Dawes, as an importer of Spanish wines, and uses the occasion to make this statement, which I repeat here:
"He [Dawes] is no fan of the very heady and overripe style of winemaking that has been championed in many other journalistic circles behind the banner of Spain’s 'Mediterranean Wine' fiction, which argues unpersuasively that Spain’s natural wine proclivity is to make overripe and alcoholic wines due to the limitations of its Mediterranean climate. Spain’s important native wine critic, Victor de la Serna of the publication, El Mundo, has long argued for this fantasy in the face of an historical legacy to the contrary."
I say this is a total misrepresentation and fabrication and I only need to show the record: every word I have written and published since we launched elmundovino (
www.elmundovino.com) as El Mundo's wine web site back in 2000 is still available online, in Spanish, yes - but that's not a language for which it's hard to find a few million translators in the United States. All my old articles in Decanter, in English, are also available in any complete collection of that magazine.
You will not find one article, or one paragraph, in which I "champion" a "very heady and overripe style". Not only that - elmundovino is often accused in some Spanish winemaking circles of being the champion of light, effete wines from such absurd places as Asturias, the Loire, the Jura or the Valais, and for our snobbish reticence to new oak. We endure the criticism because we think we are right, of course. But I'm particularly galled when I see Gilman accusing me of exactly the opposite!
There are two parts in his allegations: the wine styles I defend (false) and the existence or non-existence of a 'Mediterranean wine' with generally higher alcohol contents than more northerly wines.
Curiously, if I had stated that Châteauneuf-du-Pape and Languedoc wines have generally higher alcohol contents than Loire or Alsace wines we wouldn't be having this discussion because everyone knows that it's a fact that, for climate reasons, the sugar contents in those southern grapes are higher.
Making assertions on "Spain" as a single entity as Gilman does is totally disingenuous. It still has the largest vineyard surface of any country in the world, despite the European Union's (ill-conceived) vine pulling schemes, with some 2.5 million acres. Only France and, quite possibly, the United States have vineyards encompassing such a variety of climates (and soil types, and altitudes.)
There is a wet, temperate Atlantic Spain: its northwestern quarter and particularly its northwestern tip, Galicia (where all of Dawes' wines save for a cava come from - Gerry has never liked the wines from warmer sites), with what you could consider a warmer but also humid branch south of Portugal: sherry country. There is a Continental Spain, basically the two Castilian high plateaus, with an extreme climate that gets drier and hotter as you move from West to East, and a particularly arid Mediterranean Spain to the east and southeast, from southern Catalonia and Aragón down to monastrell/mourvèdre country in Murcia, which is actually closer to Algiers than to Madrid. The driest and warmest wine producing region in Europe.
Of course wines are radically different in Spain's southeast from those in Spain's northwest, and more powerful. It would be amazing if they weren't - and, I guess, as disappointing as suspicious for a wine lover. The winemaking style is another story. Gilman would be surprised to learn that late harvesting and overripeness were the historical styles in Aragón's garnacha/grenache country, with average alcohol around 18% back between 1900 and 1970.
Despite a fair amount of fruit bombs/oak soups favored by some American rather than Spanish critics, the trend over recent years in Mediterranean Spain has been just the opposite, and I have some personal reasons to know. An increasing number of producers are intent on correct ripeness rather than overripeness, and you'll find that drinkability and even hints of elegance are quite compatible with alcohol levels mostly between 14% and 15%. Large and mostly used oak vessels instead of new barriques are the growing pattern. If anyone is interested, I can give names of producers doing that. (Or you can go down to Chambers Street Wines: eight or nine of them are there.)
P.S. On Oswaldo's opinions on high-altitude wines and light: I disagree, but since he and I already discussed it once on WD, I'd rather leave it at that. I'm sure you can find the discussion with the search engine.