originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by Cory Cartwright:
Talk to anyone and they'll tell you that for instance, the small area behinf Montigny-les-Arsures is the superior terroir for trousseau, while Pupillin is superior for poulsard, and the good winemakers obviously further distinguish plots and yes, don't get them started on marls.
I'm not asking anyone, I'm asking hipster douchebag Jura-philes like you.
Does that folklore jibe with your experience? My only time in the region was for a wedding, so I've never been to the vineyards. I grew up with Puffeney and then Overnoy, the Houillon, then all these others that have started to come to the states like Ganevat, Gahier, etc.
Oh, monkey troll. Why do you champion ignorance of terroir under guise of "hipsters"? It's fairly pathetic for a scientist and appreciator of wines and terroirs to throw pointless and uninformed commentary like here and above. The reason you can be a douche is because you've only glanced at the region? FTL.
Alas dearest, I'm sorry to upset you so, but if the shoe fits... I can only hope that you raise the twins to shower and shave and learn to sail.
To deny that there is a cabal with gatekeepers is to deny the reality on the ground.
This is not a new thing, but a long running dispute I have with "natural" winemaking, mainly, that it seems to obscure terroir. I first noticed it in the late 1990s with Breton, namely, that the wines tasted more like each other, the Perrieres and Picasses to be precise, than they tasted like other Bourgueil and Chinon. Not that the wines from these producers can't be delicious, I'm a sucker for many of them, but that this approach may not be the best way to show site specificity. That doesn't need to be everyone's primary interest, but it is mine.
Now with wines from the Jura, many of the emerging stars seem to combine natural methodology with the traditions of the area, so it seems to me that the process could very much obscure terroir.
I was teasing Cory a bit, but I am very much interested in his FIRST hand, on the ground experience. In places that I am familiar with, Chinon, Northern Rhone, Burgundy, Piemonte, it is pretty clear the role that terroir plays. You can see it in the soil and the lay of the land.