TLDR: Postmodern Winemaking

originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
Well, for starters, jokes stand no chance of being funny if they are not understood.

needs a venn diagram.

fb.
 
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
originally posted by Zachary Ross:
Can anyone explain why the jokes are funnier when they're explained? I need a good laugh.
Your question isn't a joke so its explanation won't be funny.

Brilliant riposte! Both of us are joking! I'm sure everyone can see it but I'll be glad to explain if it's not funny enough as is.
 
It was more a linguistic bit of carelessness, I feel, on your part. "This phenolic compound has a pKa of 9," say, would have satisfied me totally. Rather than, "Phenol has a pKa of 9," which is just wrong. So find a way to write it that is correct without overcomplicating it, IMO. It lends credibility.

This is a pretty good suggestion, and I'll work something like it into the next printing if time allows.

For the rest, I believe we are good.

For any of your folks who would like to delve further into these issues, I recommend joining the discussion threads (there are several) over on WineBerserker.com this week. [http://www.wineberserkers.com/forum/viewforum.php?f=50]

With apologies, that discussion is rather all-consuming, so I won't be able to jet back here as much as I would like to in the next few days.
 
originally posted by scottreiner:
originally posted by SFJoe:


Anyhow, I look forward to opening some bottles with you sometime. I rather imagine that it would be more productive than the abstract discussion.

Now we're getting somewhere!

Actually, there is a rather outrageous potluck happening in Santa Rosa the afternoon and evening of March 22nd where I will pour my WineSmith wines including some righteous sulfite-free stuff and jam with whomever on original songs about winemaking from my upcoming CD. If you can make it, contact me through my website.
 
originally posted by SFJoe:
And hey... what is up with premox, anyway?

It's not a term I use. I believe it may refer to the practice of oxygenating juice to remove the tannins prior to fermentation, as is the custom with many rieslings. If so, it's a misnomer, because the definition of micro-oxygenation is the slow, constant delivery of oxygen at a rate below the wine's ability to consume it, so no dissolved oxygen is present. I call the juice oxygenation process "hyper-oxygenation" because it requires much huge amounts of oxygen all at once.
 
originally posted by Clark Smith:
originally posted by SFJoe:
And hey... what is up with premox, anyway?

It's not a term I use. I believe it may refer to the practice of oxygenating juice to remove the tannins prior to fermentation, as is the custom with many rieslings. If so, it's a misnomer, because the definition of micro-oxygenation is the slow, constant delivery of oxygen at a rate below the wine's ability to consume it, so no dissolved oxygen is present. I call the juice oxygenation process "hyper-oxygenation" because it requires much huge amounts of oxygen all at once.

Ah, no, a totally different phenomenon where wines whose, say, mid-'80s vintages are showing immortal fall off an oxidative (Bourginon would say sotolon) cliff at an unexpectedly early age. First spotted in mid-'90s vintages of white burgundy, now seen in many formerly long-lived European whites from many sites.

Etiology unknown, or I would at least say unexplained to my satisfaction and that of my more thoughtful colleagues.
 
originally posted by Clark Smith:
party
originally posted by scottreiner:
originally posted by SFJoe:


Anyhow, I look forward to opening some bottles with you sometime. I rather imagine that it would be more productive than the abstract discussion.

Now we're getting somewhere!

Actually, there is a rather outrageous potluck happening in Santa Rosa the afternoon and evening of March 22nd where I will pour my WineSmith wines including some righteous sulfite-free stuff and jam with whomever on original songs about winemaking from my upcoming CD. If you can make it, contact me through my website.

any plans for an east coast tour?
 
"Denis Dubourdieu, a wine consultant and professor at Bordeaux’s institute of oenology, the ISVV, said producers who chaptalise should try to limit the increase in alcohol to 1% abv, to avoid unbalancing other flavours. In theory, that means adding no more than 17g of sugar per litre, he said."

Who am I to tell you to read between the lines here, in any which way that pleases you.
 
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