originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
"Natural" is a trap... do this, don't do that, instead of heeding the terroir. Maybe there are plots of dirt that don't do better au naturel?
Hmmm, the basic idea behind natural wine is "nothing added, nothing subtracted", which I would translate as "do nothing" rather than "do this, don't do that." The latter, which involves the picking and choosing of what to do and what not to do, is how I would describe industrial wine.
Before anyone screams, of course it's not "do nothing" in the ultimate (otiose) sense, but rather do nothing other than the bare essentials: picking the acceptably-grown (judgment required) grapes at some reasonable (judgment required) point, sorting, pressing, and fermenting for an appropriate (judgment required) amount of time.
As for terroir, if by this we mean the man-free definition, it seems to me self-evident that it will manifest best where interference is least, as long as minimal intervention doesn't result in defects that mask it (a fundamental proviso). If you're making natural wine in a place too hot for this, perhaps you shouldn't be. These would be the "plots of dirt that don't do better au naturel."
Natural wine requires a handful of mandatory judgment calls (that make literal-minded people decry the term) but its goal should be the clearest possible terroir expression. That requires it to be essentially defect-free, without the so-called natural footprint (if by that we mean some combination of the defects we have come to expect from sulfur free or low sulfur wine).