originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
originally posted by SFJoe:
I may misunderstand you, but I had the impression that there was a lot of connoisseurship in classical antiquity if not before. Price variations between different sources as one index of established preferences.originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
The attention to the quality of some wines and terroirs doesn't really begin until the Renaissance
I don't think you misunderstood me. And I may be wrong. I may have been inappropriately generalizing from the French understanding of their own wine. I know that the Romans assiduously planted vines. And it makes sense that, for those who had the money to choose, they could make preferences among the wines from their separate colonies. Given recipes for spicing, sugaring and treating the wine, I very much doubt they had any notion of tasting for terroir. But those who know more should feel free to contradict me.
Did the Burgundian monks not predate the Renaissance? Or were they not French?