Bill Lundstrom
Bill Lundstrom
originally posted by SFJoe:
So does anyone know if they really still chaptalize Bordeaux?
And can anyone recommend a decent wine made with micro-ox?
Are mark de grazies wines still micro-oxed?
originally posted by SFJoe:
So does anyone know if they really still chaptalize Bordeaux?
And can anyone recommend a decent wine made with micro-ox?
originally posted by SFJoe:
So does anyone know if they really still chaptalize Bordeaux?
And can anyone recommend a decent wine made with micro-ox?
originally posted by SFJoe:
So does anyone know if they really still chaptalize Bordeaux?
And can anyone recommend a decent wine made with micro-ox?
I supposed in a megascaled operation locked into gigantic tanks and minimal labor costs the above strategy might appeal, but that does sound weird. Last time (admittedly a while ago) that I was working on the producer side, the practice was to run trial ROs and blends to figure out the minimum amount of de-alcing needed to get to what they felt was a balanced and tasty wine.And reducing the alcohol in the wine to 13.0% and adding neutral spirits to "sweet spot" the wines up to their maximum quality? I've heard of people doing that with wines they're trying to save from selling off as bulk, but as a regular practice? Really, who does that? No winemakers that I talk to (or if they do, they're certainly in the closet...)
Clark Smith doesn't actually know what could move in Omaha. In fact, even most of the people selling what moves in Omaha don't generally know what COULD move in Omaha, only what IS moving in Omaha, which they try to emulate, at least until the next stumbled-upon successful flavor style pops up there. For an industry that spends so much time considering and tinkering with sensory qualities in the product, there is surprisingly little properly controlled, quantitative sensory research done with actual consumers.He periodically dismisses various winemaking practices that were used on most of the stuff in my cellar with an airy wave at how they’d never move in the Omaha market, or to the requirements of tank-farm winemaking.
So he's citing absolute objective measurements for subjective phenomena? You'd think a post-modern guy wouldn't do that.But then in the next sentence he will get all nostalgic for the old cabin and how it used to be done, soulfully. This frequent inconsistency, or dare I say self-contradiction, is one of the annoying aspects of the work. Smith justifies it to some degree by his title. He is not one of your Cartesian formalists, oh, no, he is a postmodernist...
“...Pascal Ribeareau-Gayon, who when we met in 1991 was director of the Faculty of Oenology at the University of Bordeaux. He expressed delight over a 1990 Merlot he had been involved with that had a pH of 3.95 and a TA of 2.9...To be truly great, he felt, a red Bordeaux must have low titratable acidity...."This is just a fundamental aesthetic difference I have with the guy. I really don’t mind red wine that makes me salivate.
originally posted by SFJoe:
So does anyone know if they really still chaptalize Bordeaux?
originally posted by SFJoe:
And can anyone recommend a decent wine made with micro-ox?
originally posted by SFJoe:
Aw, shucks, guys.
As I muse about this, and talk about it a bit, I think I should also mention points where Smith would probably find a warmer reception by some on this board.
For instance:
* He comes out pretty strongly against extended hang time in reds, objecting to what it does to the tannin components he wants available for his oxidations in the winery.
* He comes out strongly against DAP and similar yeast supplements, on the (several times repeated) grounds that yeast that gobble their meal won't eat all the minor menu items that would subsequently nourish brett. Thus: "If we feed them Twinkies, those yeasts just won't eat their oatmeal, and the result will be lots of leftover unconsumed micronutrients--like half-eaten pizzas, left around to encourage the vermin." (a very characteristic Smith sentence, btw)
* He comes out against new oak barrels. Of course, he wants you to use oak chips instead....
Yes, it's nice to see an honest argument instead of the old "all wine is manipulation" chestnut.originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
And I'll add my thanks for the book review. It's nice to hear a full-throated, open defense of manipulation. If there is a case to be made, that would be how it would have to be made.
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
Honest?
Oh, he pretty much says that too.originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
the old "all wine is manipulation" chestnut.
originally posted by SFJoe:
Oh, he pretty much says that too.originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
the old "all wine is manipulation" chestnut.
He wonders why we don't all object to electricity.
Being right for the wrong reasons is still being wrong. Objecting to hang time so you can micro-ox or objecting to oak barrels because you can get the same effect much more cheaply with chips really isn't objecting to over-ripeness or oak...
originally posted by Christian Miller (CMM):
I'm puzzled by many natural wine fans' objection to micro-ox or oak chips per se.
originally posted by SFJoe:
originally posted by Christian Miller (CMM):
I'm puzzled by many natural wine fans' objection to micro-ox or oak chips per se.
Speaking only for myself, I think the aesthetic goals of many micro-oxers and wood chippers turn out to be different from my own.
I can imagine a universe where micro-ox was used to reasonable effect. Wood chips are just another flavor additive.
But it mostly turns out that the folks who do it aren't making wines I enjoy.