Oswaldo Costa
Oswaldo Costa
A spectre is haunting the natural wine world, the spectre of volatile acidity.
The spectre has a supply side and a demand side.
The supply side:
The otherwise laudable use of minimal or no SO2 leaves grapes and musts unprotected
A nearly uninterrupted string of dismal weather has caused widespread rot
The tiny acreage of most artisanal producers reduces the incentive for rigorous triage
The otherwise laudable use of old barrels that may be insufficiently cleaned between uses
The growth of laissez-faire winemaking, including insufficient cellar hygiene and long barrel ageing in oxidative conditions
The growth of artisanal producers in cheaper and hotter climates where bacteria proliferate faster
A disincentive to discard spoilage when there’s a public for it, especially in Scandinavia
The demand side:
Growth in number of natural wine importers who chase the hip and can’t distinguish non-volatile from volatile
Growth in number of natural wine label drinkers who chase the hip and can’t distinguish non-volatile from volatile
Professionals specializing in natural wine have little incentive to combat the spectre because that would dramatically reduce their supply (while most customers can’t distinguish non-volatile from volatile)
The occasional usefulness of moderate v.a. in warm climate wines lacking non-volatile acidity
The particular insensitivity to v.a. of Scandinavians, possibly due to the vinegary and fermented food that is currently (and otherwise deservedly) fashionable
The intersection of ample supply conditions with ample demand conditions generates the perfect spectre.
The non-trivial correlation between natural winemaking and non-trivial v.a. gives natural wines a bad name.
But let no one speak of this, for there’s a lot of money riding on silence.
Party poopers are not invited for cocktails, so let's carry on pretending that these are the days of miracle and wonder and don’t cry, baby, don’t cry.
The spectre has a supply side and a demand side.
The supply side:
The otherwise laudable use of minimal or no SO2 leaves grapes and musts unprotected
A nearly uninterrupted string of dismal weather has caused widespread rot
The tiny acreage of most artisanal producers reduces the incentive for rigorous triage
The otherwise laudable use of old barrels that may be insufficiently cleaned between uses
The growth of laissez-faire winemaking, including insufficient cellar hygiene and long barrel ageing in oxidative conditions
The growth of artisanal producers in cheaper and hotter climates where bacteria proliferate faster
A disincentive to discard spoilage when there’s a public for it, especially in Scandinavia
The demand side:
Growth in number of natural wine importers who chase the hip and can’t distinguish non-volatile from volatile
Growth in number of natural wine label drinkers who chase the hip and can’t distinguish non-volatile from volatile
Professionals specializing in natural wine have little incentive to combat the spectre because that would dramatically reduce their supply (while most customers can’t distinguish non-volatile from volatile)
The occasional usefulness of moderate v.a. in warm climate wines lacking non-volatile acidity
The particular insensitivity to v.a. of Scandinavians, possibly due to the vinegary and fermented food that is currently (and otherwise deservedly) fashionable
The intersection of ample supply conditions with ample demand conditions generates the perfect spectre.
The non-trivial correlation between natural winemaking and non-trivial v.a. gives natural wines a bad name.
But let no one speak of this, for there’s a lot of money riding on silence.
Party poopers are not invited for cocktails, so let's carry on pretending that these are the days of miracle and wonder and don’t cry, baby, don’t cry.