Ian Fitzsimmons
Ian Fitzsimmons
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originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
Is d'Angerville a schnook, in your view?
originally posted by Tom Glasgow:
By comparison, Piemonte has 40,000 ha. But will the fallow 18,000 ha be eligible to be planted given Euro constraints?
originally posted by Oliver McCrum:
originally posted by Tom Glasgow:
By comparison, Piemonte has 40,000 ha. But will the fallow 18,000 ha be eligible to be planted given Euro constraints?
Piedmont is a huge region. Perhaps a better comparison might be Barolo and Barbaresco, which together are about 1,500 ha.
originally posted by Guilhaume gerard:
Buying Brignot's (almost dead) vineyards because you thought a bottle of Tissot chardonnay was burgundian.
It's hilarious really.
originally posted by Guilhaume gerard:
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
Is d'Angerville a schnook, in your view?
I've never seen him in line for an appointment with Lee Campbell
originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by Guilhaume gerard:
Buying Brignot's (almost dead) vineyards because you thought a bottle of Tissot chardonnay was burgundian.
It's hilarious really.
Is Brignot from the Jura?
originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by Oliver McCrum:
originally posted by Tom Glasgow:
By comparison, Piemonte has 40,000 ha. But will the fallow 18,000 ha be eligible to be planted given Euro constraints?
Piedmont is a huge region. Perhaps a better comparison might be Barolo and Barbaresco, which together are about 1,500 ha.
Only if you think the terroir of equal quality.
It doesn't matter a hell of a lot for sous voile wines, does it? It's a cellar made wine.
Exactly.originally posted by Oliver McCrum:
originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by Oliver McCrum:
originally posted by Tom Glasgow:
By comparison, Piemonte has 40,000 ha. But will the fallow 18,000 ha be eligible to be planted given Euro constraints?
Piedmont is a huge region. Perhaps a better comparison might be Barolo and Barbaresco, which together are about 1,500 ha.
Only if you think the terroir of equal quality.
It doesn't matter a hell of a lot for sous voile wines, does it? It's a cellar made wine.
I was responding to Claude's point 'If I had to guess now, the situation will end up somewhat like Piemonte, with prices going up to some extent .' I think Claude was referring to Barolo and Barbaresco, not Barbera d'Asti.
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
Exactly.originally posted by Oliver McCrum:
originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by Oliver McCrum:
originally posted by Tom Glasgow:
By comparison, Piemonte has 40,000 ha. But will the fallow 18,000 ha be eligible to be planted given Euro constraints?
Piedmont is a huge region. Perhaps a better comparison might be Barolo and Barbaresco, which together are about 1,500 ha.
Only if you think the terroir of equal quality.
It doesn't matter a hell of a lot for sous voile wines, does it? It's a cellar made wine.
I was responding to Claude's point 'If I had to guess now, the situation will end up somewhat like Piemonte, with prices going up to some extent .' I think Claude was referring to Barolo and Barbaresco, not Barbera d'Asti.
originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
Exactly.originally posted by Oliver McCrum:
originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by Oliver McCrum:
originally posted by Tom Glasgow:
By comparison, Piemonte has 40,000 ha. But will the fallow 18,000 ha be eligible to be planted given Euro constraints?
Piedmont is a huge region. Perhaps a better comparison might be Barolo and Barbaresco, which together are about 1,500 ha.
Only if you think the terroir of equal quality.
It doesn't matter a hell of a lot for sous voile wines, does it? It's a cellar made wine.
I was responding to Claude's point 'If I had to guess now, the situation will end up somewhat like Piemonte, with prices going up to some extent .' I think Claude was referring to Barolo and Barbaresco, not Barbera d'Asti.
Yes, and I understood both of your points while making a slightly different one and kind of asking a question.
I'm curious what people think who know the area well about how much of a difference terroir makes for many of the wines. Conversations about the wines of the Jura tend to revolve around vignerons, methodology, and grapes but not terroir. So if those other things trump terroir, maybe vines can be planted in the Roero of the Jura and make fantastic wines.
So all you Jura-philes, what do you think?
Huge differences, that I probably don't fully appreciate. But a neo-Burgundian winemaker like Ganevat (obscure joke) is at great pains to distinguish his grey from his white from his blue marls for whites, and reds often on clay and limestone, etc.originally posted by VLM:
I'm curious what people think who know the area well about how much of a difference terroir makes for many of the wines. Conversations about the wines of the Jura tend to revolve around vignerons, methodology, and grapes but not terroir. So if those other things trump terroir, maybe vines can be planted in the Roero of the Jura and make fantastic wines.
So all you Jura-philes, what do you think?
originally posted by SFJoe:
Huge differences, that I probably don't fully appreciate. But a neo-Burgundian winemaker like Ganevat (obscure joke) is at great pains to distinguish his grey from his white from his blue marls for whites, and reds often on clay and limestone, etc.originally posted by VLM:
I'm curious what people think who know the area well about how much of a difference terroir makes for many of the wines. Conversations about the wines of the Jura tend to revolve around vignerons, methodology, and grapes but not terroir. So if those other things trump terroir, maybe vines can be planted in the Roero of the Jura and make fantastic wines.
So all you Jura-philes, what do you think?
I don't have enough French to have interrogated him closely on the subject, but why wouldn't it matter in the Jura when it matters pretty much everywhere else making interesting wine in the world?