originally posted by SFJoe:
She's under 100m. Totally in the clear.
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
at the risk of reignitingSaw this today: "It's a failure in the vineyard if I have to wait until the sugars get too high for the flavors to get ripe." -- Cathy Corison
This is also the argument made in CC's low elevation neighborhood.originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
at the risk of reignitingSaw this today: "It's a failure in the vineyard if I have to wait until the sugars get too high for the flavors to get ripe." -- Cathy Corison
According to local enologists, something similar (or maybe the same) happens in Chile and Argentina: if they pick at the traditional European maturity point, the tannins will be too green, so they say they have to pick supermature.
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
Would canopy management help in this case? Trim leaves, slow sugar accumulation ... synchronize with tannin development.
Maybe even stronger than that. Kevin believes in dirt.originally posted by Jay Miller:
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
Would canopy management help in this case? Trim leaves, slow sugar accumulation ... synchronize with tannin development.
Kevin Harvey would probably say that soil makes one of the biggest differences.
originally posted by SFJoe:
This is also the argument made in CC's low elevation neighborhood.originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
at the risk of reignitingSaw this today: "It's a failure in the vineyard if I have to wait until the sugars get too high for the flavors to get ripe." -- Cathy Corison
According to local enologists, something similar (or maybe the same) happens in Chile and Argentina: if they pick at the traditional European maturity point, the tannins will be too green, so they say they have to pick supermature.
originally posted by Jeff Connell:
So let's all agree, the great vineyards are all between 45° and 49° (North) on a nice south facing slope (gentle or steep), between 200 and 600 metres in limestone and clay soil. Anyway, I agree - except for all the exceptions.
originally posted by Jeff Connell:
But what if you are not in a privileged site in Western Europe?
originally posted by Jeff Connell:
What if you are just wherever you are, and you want to plant vines anyway? Maybe somewhere in Mendoza or Manchuela. Maybe you have a hillside to plant on, even a mountain slope, or an alluvial river basin, or simply some terrain that gives a home to the vine. Rest assured that your wine is crap and someone on Wine Disorder will be happy to point that out.