Saina Nieminen
Saina Nieminen
Since the Terpin Sialis Irn-Bru -coloured Pinot Grigio that I opened earlier this week was so good, I just opened the Terpin Sialis Bianco 2004. It's a blend of Sauvignon 45%, Chardonnay 45% and Pinot Grigio 10% and at least the first glass suggests that this is another lovely, awesome orange wine. Due to some bottle age and 30 days of skin contact this is perhaps the darkest "orange" wine I've had. It smells of oolong tea and white Musar; it has sweet fruit and quite rich body, and as seems typical for Terpin it isn't terribly high in acidity, but it is still well structured enough.
I've sometimes criticized orange wines for being rather similar no matter where they come from or what grape(s) they have, but I still love some of them! This Terpin struck me as incredibly complex (but isn't complexity one of the most subjective terms used in wine writing though it is often bandied about as if it were objective?), incredibly balanced (ditto above on complexity!) and just incredibly lovable.
But if I denigrate spoofy wines for all being so alike, how can I justify my love for orange wines and for other wines in a more radical "natural" mould which also have a certain sameness to them? Of course I would just like to say - what for me is the most powerful argument of them all - that I just like their aromas, tastes and textures and I just dislike those of spoofy wines because liking a wine is a very emotional rather than rational deed. But I would still like to rationalize why I can enjoy a kind of sameness in orange wines but can't enjoy sameness in spoof. Any suggestions?
I've sometimes criticized orange wines for being rather similar no matter where they come from or what grape(s) they have, but I still love some of them! This Terpin struck me as incredibly complex (but isn't complexity one of the most subjective terms used in wine writing though it is often bandied about as if it were objective?), incredibly balanced (ditto above on complexity!) and just incredibly lovable.
But if I denigrate spoofy wines for all being so alike, how can I justify my love for orange wines and for other wines in a more radical "natural" mould which also have a certain sameness to them? Of course I would just like to say - what for me is the most powerful argument of them all - that I just like their aromas, tastes and textures and I just dislike those of spoofy wines because liking a wine is a very emotional rather than rational deed. But I would still like to rationalize why I can enjoy a kind of sameness in orange wines but can't enjoy sameness in spoof. Any suggestions?