Ian Sutton
Spanna in the works
2558
Sun Apr 09, 2006 2:10 pm
Norwich, UK
Carl Eppig
Our Maine man
4149
Tue Jun 13, 2006 1:38 pm
Middleton, NH, USA
Howie Hart
The Hart of Buffalo
6389
Thu Mar 23, 2006 4:13 pm
Niagara Falls, NY
Hoke
Achieving Wine Immortality
11420
Sat Apr 15, 2006 1:07 am
Portland, OR
Howie Hart wrote:Another bit of confusion is with sparkling wines.Naturel - totally dry
Brut - .5 to 1.5% RS
Extra Dry - 1.5 to 2.5% RS
Dry - 2.5 to 3.5% RS
Ian Sutton wrote::)
Yes this one does cause a bit of debate around the table.
In principle I agree with the definition, though in the absence of a residual sugar amount noted on the label I'd refer to my perception of residual sugar. FWIW, the NZ wine critic Michael Cooper uses the following definition in his wine buyers guide:
Dry: less than 5grams/litre of sugar
Med-dry (aka off-dry): 5-14 grams / litre
Med: 15-49 grams / litre
Sweet: 50+ grams / litre
By this count most reds are dry and a large proportion of whites, even though some reds will have a somewhat sweet taste from the ripe fruit.
However some wines still taste sweet when there is little or no residual sugar, either due to the strength of the fruit (where I'll aim to refer to it as "fruit-sweet but otherwise dry") or the effect of alcohol, which can give an impression of sweetness (I might refer to possible alcohol related sweetness).
with off-dry or sweet wines, it's very useful to consider the acidity levels, as high acidity can work stunningly well with sweetness, whereas sweetness without acidity, tends towards flabbyness and supermarket Liebfraumilch or Lambrusco.
Another good question!
regards
Ian
Sue Courtney wrote:Ian Sutton wrote::)
Yes this one does cause a bit of debate around the table.
In principle I agree with the definition, though in the absence of a residual sugar amount noted on the label I'd refer to my perception of residual sugar. FWIW, the NZ wine critic Michael Cooper uses the following definition in his wine buyers guide:
Dry: less than 5grams/litre of sugar
Med-dry (aka off-dry): 5-14 grams / litre
Med: 15-49 grams / litre
Sweet: 50+ grams / litre
By this count most reds are dry and a large proportion of whites, even though some reds will have a somewhat sweet taste from the ripe fruit.
However some wines still taste sweet when there is little or no residual sugar, either due to the strength of the fruit (where I'll aim to refer to it as "fruit-sweet but otherwise dry") or the effect of alcohol, which can give an impression of sweetness (I might refer to possible alcohol related sweetness).
with off-dry or sweet wines, it's very useful to consider the acidity levels, as high acidity can work stunningly well with sweetness, whereas sweetness without acidity, tends towards flabbyness and supermarket Liebfraumilch or Lambrusco.
Another good question!
regards
Ian
FWIW, at NZ wines shows, the cutoffs for dry / medium and medium sweet differ a little from Michael's definitions. Dry can be up to and including 7.5 grams per litre (g/l) of residual sugar (rs), medium starts at the cutoff for dry and goes up to 30g/l rs, medium sweet is 30 to 50 g/l rs and sweet is over 50 g/l rs.
All NZ wine shows have dry and medium classes for the aromatic wines and this can vary depending on theshow. In addition the Royal Easter Show has dry/medium subclasses for the non-aromatics.
In the Air NZ Wine Awards - Riesling, Pinot Gris and Gewurztraminer are split into dry and medium subclasses, where dry is up to (but not including) 7g/l rs and medium is 7g/l rs to 30g/rs. All wines from 30g/l rs to 50g/l rs are considered medium sweet and sweet is over 50g/l rs. There is no dry/medium split for Sauvignon Blanc, Chardonnay and other whites.
In the New Zealand International Wine Show, and the Liquorland Top 100, the cut off for dry in the Riesling, Pinot Gris and Gewurztraminer classes is up to (but not including) 7.5 grams per litre of residual sugar. Ditto as above for Chardonnay, Sauvignon Blanc, Viognier, etc.
In the Royal Easter Wine Show, they also split Chardonnay, Sauvignon Blanc and Semillon into dry and medium subclasses and for a wine to be in a dry class, residual sugar must not exceed 5g/l rs. However in the aromatics and other specified and unspecified white classes, residual sugar must not exceed (therefore includes) 7.5g/l rs for a wine to be correctly entered in the dry subclass.
Is it confusing - or what? And then, as you say, many people's perception of sweetness can be altered by other factors, including acidity. Last week, when teaching a wine class I poured a Riesling that had 29 g/l rs and 9 g/l total acidity and to everyone there, it tasted much drier and much lower in acid than it really was.
Cheers,
Sue
Thomas wrote:I have no argument with Andrea Immer Robinson's statement that "any wine that has no residual sugar is dry." Problem is: hardly any wine comes without residual sugar, which logically would mean that there are no dry wines.
David Creighton
Wine guru
1217
Wed May 24, 2006 10:07 am
ann arbor, michigan
Ian Sutton
Spanna in the works
2558
Sun Apr 09, 2006 2:10 pm
Norwich, UK
creightond wrote: AND no one has mentioned glycerine - which is an alcohol that truly does taste sweet.
Robin Garr wrote:Thomas wrote:I have no argument with Andrea Immer Robinson's statement that "any wine that has no residual sugar is dry." Problem is: hardly any wine comes without residual sugar, which logically would mean that there are no dry wines.
Always looking for a short-cut answer, though, Thomas, don't you think Andrea's problem would have been largely solved here if she had added a single adjective, "Any wine that has no <i>perceptible</i> residual sugar is dry"? Or, restated, "If it doesn't taste sweet, it's dry"?
Thomas wrote:one person's "perceptible" can be another person's "eeww, sweet," especially when the r.s. is on that precarious borderline leaning toward sweet, wrapped in a bowl of tropical fruit, helped by malolactic low acidity, and taken up a notch by alcohol--all in a valiant and often successful effort to confuse the palate.
In my opinion, the word "dry" to describe wine should be abandoned. I like the idea of maybe listing the r.s. and the relative acidity. Over time, consumers would come to better understand the relationship between those two and, more important, they would figure out the levels of that relationship that pleases their palates. Plus, there would be no need for single phrase solutions that are inaccurate or uninformative at trying to explain a technical situation.
That is my opinion, it is not, however, my expectation of how events will turn out.
Robin Garr wrote:Thomas wrote:one person's "perceptible" can be another person's "eeww, sweet," especially when the r.s. is on that precarious borderline leaning toward sweet, wrapped in a bowl of tropical fruit, helped by malolactic low acidity, and taken up a notch by alcohol--all in a valiant and often successful effort to confuse the palate.
True, but as with so many other elements of wine - TCA sensitivity, for instance - individual perceptions vary, but this doesn't deter us from declaring a wine "corked" if most tasters pick up musty/moldy stench in it. The industry has a pretty clearly established definition for threshold of perception in RS, and it seems to me to be needlessly finicky to look for a more precise definition.In my opinion, the word "dry" to describe wine should be abandoned. I like the idea of maybe listing the r.s. and the relative acidity. Over time, consumers would come to better understand the relationship between those two and, more important, they would figure out the levels of that relationship that pleases their palates. Plus, there would be no need for single phrase solutions that are inaccurate or uninformative at trying to explain a technical situation.
That is my opinion, it is not, however, my expectation of how events will turn out.
I don't think it's going to happen, either, and honestly, I don't think it should. Why make wine appreciation more complicated than it already is.
Now, in terms of ain't-gonna-happen ideas, how about we make it a felony, subject to jail time, for a producer to label his wine "dry" if it clearly is not?
TimMc wrote:Definition of dry? How astringent it is to the taste. I have had numerous dry whites and reds that smell sweet or off dry, but finish dry.
Deborah Ackerman wrote:Without consideration for the r.s. technicalities, of which I am not knowledgeable enough to convey to someone else, this is a simplistic and pure definition that I can agree with.
Robin Garr wrote:Deborah Ackerman wrote:Without consideration for the r.s. technicalities, of which I am not knowledgeable enough to convey to someone else, this is a simplistic and pure definition that I can agree with.
Unfortunately, there's a problem with it. "Astringency," a mouth-puckering feeling similar to that you get from strong black tea, is a well-established description for the effect one gets in a wine with lots of tannins. It's a useful wine term indeed, but it defines a completely different sensation than "dry" in the traditional wine sense. If you want a "simplistic and pure" definition of "Dry," then I suggest we go with "not sweet."
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