Peter Creasey
Peter Creasey
originally posted by Levi Dalton: Soil
Levi, yours is one of the better online postings in recent times.
Thanks!
. . . . Pete
originally posted by Levi Dalton: Soil
originally posted by Peter Creasey:
originally posted by Levi Dalton: Soil
Levi, yours is one of the better online postings in recent times.
Thanks!
. . . . Pete
originally posted by VLM:
Monsecco “Barbatasso” Vespolina Colline Novaresi 2015
Monsecco Sizzano 2013
Monsecco Gattinara 2011
All all excellent and impressive.
originally posted by Rahsaan:
originally posted by VLM:
Monsecco “Barbatasso” Vespolina Colline Novaresi 2015
Monsecco Sizzano 2013
Monsecco Gattinara 2011
All all excellent and impressive.
Glad to hear that.
I opened the 2011 Gattinara this weekend and it was so pale and fruitless on opening I thought it was corked.
A few hours later it had filled in a bit, so I could actually perceive the fruit. Of course that fruit was rocky and stony, never too giving. I found it interesting, but not sure it ever reached excellent or impressive for me.
Maybe it remained slightly corked (although I don't usually experience such evolution with corked wines).
Either way, plan to give the next bottle a (longer) decant.
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
I think clay, like sand, is defined by grain size, not rock type or composition. Because of its small grain size, clay may hold its water very tightly (the large aggregate surface area, combined with small intern-grain spaces, causes relatively high capillary pressure), whereas sand, because of its relatively large grain size and inter-grain spaces, holds water loosely, i.e., drains quickly - depending on the composition and slope of the soil or rock beneath it, as well as the depth of the water table.
I suppose clay releases its water to plant roots gradually, as leaves transpire in the absence of rain and root osmotic pressure increases; up until the two pressures equalize. This should give vines planted in clay some buffer against down-regulation of photosynthetic rate in dry conditions, so sugar and tissue synthesis would, in general, be interrupted less frequently than otherwise.
On the other hand, I've read here and there that fast-draining soil is a favorable condition for grape vines: is this a proposition that doesn't hold water?
Mark, be gentle.
I have read that, too: the last thing you want is fat, happy vines. What you want is for the vine to think it's days are numbered and so it's going to make the best possible offspring.originally posted by MLipton:
That last statement can be understood if one understands that stressed grape vines are generally viewed as affording better wines, so planting on poor soils that drain readily is one way of stressing a vine.
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
I have read that, too: the last thing you want is fat, happy vines. What you want is for the vine to think it's days are numbered and so it's going to make the best possible offspring.originally posted by MLipton:
That last statement can be understood if one understands that stressed grape vines are generally viewed as affording better wines, so planting on poor soils that drain readily is one way of stressing a vine.
originally posted by Christian Miller (CMM):
I find it interesting that wine academics and connoisseurs have spent so much time pondering the impact of underlying, geological soils and so little on the microflora of the topsoil.
Well, I'm trying to reconcile this idea with Levi's statement:originally posted by MLipton:
You've got it right, Ian. That last statement can be understood if one understands that stressed grape vines are generally viewed as affording better wines, so planting on poor soils that drain readily is one way of stressing a vine.
Mark Lipton
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
Well, I'm trying to reconcile this idea with Levi's statement:originally posted by MLipton:
You've got it right, Ian. That last statement can be understood if one understands that stressed grape vines are generally viewed as affording better wines, so planting on poor soils that drain readily is one way of stressing a vine.
Mark Lipton
"What I am saying is that clay and the great wines of the world are synonymous. Clay is dominant or a key dance partner is most of what we think of as the great wines that are sought after [...]"
Granted that Levi, as a professional and specialist, knows quite a lot more about wines than I do, in general, and Italian wines, especially, I have no interest in challenging his expertise. But calling clay and the great wines of the world synonymous is a sweeping statement. I wonder if the causal factors of great wines are multiple and combine in different ways from place to place, so that different combinations of soil, exposure, levage technique, variety, weather, and vigneron skill (add others ...) may give a variety of great wines - some from vines grown in clay, some from vines grown in other soils.
I don't feel I have enough hard info at my fingertips to venture a firm opinion, but discussion on the topic might be instructive.
originally posted by mark e:
originally posted by Christian Miller (CMM):
I find it interesting that wine academics and connoisseurs have spent so much time pondering the impact of underlying, geological soils and so little on the microflora of the topsoil.
I don't think it odd to spend so much time on the underlying soil. There are a lot of vine roots down there and they often penetrate the hard pan. (This is based on first-hand vine root mapping research done years ago w/Harold Olmo at UCD).
originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
Well, I'm trying to reconcile this idea with Levi's statement:
"What I am saying is that clay and the great wines of the world are synonymous. Clay is dominant or a key dance partner is most of what we think of as the great wines that are sought after [...]"
Many of the soils that are commonly referred to as calcaire or limestone soils are clay/limestone. This would include Burgundy, Pomerol, parts of the Piedmont and the Loire, for example.
originally posted by VLM:
Ioppa Colline Novaresi Vespolina 2015
Ioppa Colline Novaresi Nebbiolo 2015
I found these disappointing, but others liked them more.
originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by Rahsaan:
originally posted by VLM:
Monsecco Gattinara 2011
...excellent and impressive.
Glad to hear that.
I opened the 2011 Gattinara this weekend and it was so pale and fruitless...
The Gattinara is definitely on the structured side, but there was fruit, though more on the dried end of that spectrum. It was maybe the most structured wine of the evening.
originally posted by Rahsaan:
originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by Rahsaan:
originally posted by VLM:
Monsecco Gattinara 2011
...excellent and impressive.
Glad to hear that.
I opened the 2011 Gattinara this weekend and it was so pale and fruitless...
The Gattinara is definitely on the structured side, but there was fruit, though more on the dried end of that spectrum. It was maybe the most structured wine of the evening.
Had another bottle of the 2011 Gattinara yesterday and made sure to give it more air. I coaxed more joy out of the bottle than the first one and it played a pleasant role with food. But definitely not a wine for the masses (at least not the masses I know), and probably not something I need to drink a lot of. But there was some appeal.