Jonathan Loesberg
Jonathan Loesberg
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
Jonathan: If everyone had the same alleles then we might be able to define terroir a little more precisely. But, as we all have different "tools" to use, it's no surprise that scientific methods don't give the expected result.
It is for this reason that I have argued that wine evaluation is irreducibly subjective. Before one gets to the evaluation, it turns out that the actual taste information is irreducibly subjective.
But the issue with blind tasting is slightly different since I was suggesting that our abilities to match up our tastes with our memories of tastes is also less than mistake proof. In other words, even if we established that we could develop an absolute evaluative taxonomy of terroirs--or even some reasonably limited version of it--and we could establish that the taxonomy held even taking into account the range of physiological variation in tasting among human beings, our ability to identify the terriors in question through our tastes--again assuming that we already knew how it tasted to us--is still less than wonderful. None of those proves or even comes close to proving that terroir differences that go to significant wine differences don't exist. But, as I siad at first, it does suggest we should hold our own views on the issue somewhat loosely.