originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by mark e:
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
Those were UC Davis inheritances, right?originally posted by VLM:
The big thing was busting the myth of "physiological maturity" and the use of ambient yeast fermentation.
Don't think so. Leo McCloskey was a prime mover behind the former (and folks like Helen Turley). UCD preached the gospel of specific pure yeast strains, certainly not ambient yeast.
Kenny's thesis at Davis was on ambient yeast fermentation compared to inoculated yeast. He's been interested in it from the beginning. Davis is a legit research university and I'm sure that the faculty there looks at all sorts of things. The anti-Davis mentality was from a failed fucking lawyer who con jobbed people with physiological maturity and "tasting the grapes". What an asshat.
Hmm . . . maybe things have changed. I'm guessing Kenny went there at least 30 years after I did. I'm sure the stuff they are teaching now is vastly different. In the 70s - though native yeasts were discussed - inoculated fermentations were the order of the day, as well as acid adjustment to lower pH. Pushing the ripeness envelope was a later phenomenon.