
Moderators: Jenise, Robin Garr, David M. Bueker
Hoke
Achieving Wine Immortality
11420
Sat Apr 15, 2006 1:07 am
Portland, OR
Sam Platt
I am Sam, Sam I am
2330
Sat Mar 25, 2006 12:22 pm
Indiana, USA

Sam Platt wrote:One taste and you will be able to answer your own question, Tom.
Dale Williams
Compassionate Connoisseur
12046
Tue Mar 21, 2006 4:32 pm
Dobbs Ferry, NY (NYC metro)
TomHill wrote:it is pretty much a given//the standard shibboleth// we are repeatedly told //We are also repeatedly scolded by the authorities//never be regarded// we are told//given these three "truths"//we have been assured by the "authorities",// the above truths.
Lou Kessler wrote:Hell, I've never been convinced exactly what the definition of terroir is.? I've heard so many different descriptions that when I hear the word I just wince and try not to lose my train of thought. The rest of your inquiry, I'll leave the answer to the same people who figured out how many angels on the head of a pin?
TomHill wrote:But the term "terroir" has morphed into something that is to be worshiped, to be put up on a pedestal. If a wine displays "terroir", then that makes it something special. The French have milked that concept for all it's worth, because they have French "terroir" and nobody else does, so their wines are superior.
TomHill wrote:So...it is pretty much a given that for a wine to be characterized as "great" it must:
1. Show its individual terroir where it was grown.
2. Show the varietal character of the grape from which it was made.
James Roscoe
Chat Prince
11069
Wed Mar 22, 2006 6:43 pm
D.C. Metro Area - Maryland
TomHill wrote:Lou Kessler wrote:Hell, I've never been convinced exactly what the definition of terroir is.? I've heard so many different descriptions that when I hear the word I just wince and try not to lose my train of thought. The rest of your inquiry, I'll leave the answer to the same people who figured out how many angels on the head of a pin?
Keith M
Beer Explorer
1184
Sat Jan 06, 2007 2:25 am
Finger Lakes, New York
Victorwine wrote:I always had a problem with “typicity”.
Salute
Hoke
Achieving Wine Immortality
11420
Sat Apr 15, 2006 1:07 am
Portland, OR
Paul Winalski
Wok Wielder
9287
Wed Mar 22, 2006 9:16 pm
Merrimack, New Hampshire
Hoke
Achieving Wine Immortality
11420
Sat Apr 15, 2006 1:07 am
Portland, OR
Victorwine wrote:Thanks Hoke!
Quick question- Could “house-style” wine posses’ typicity for that given “house-style”?
Salute
Lou Kessler wrote:I appreciate someone agreeing with me who I know has a long & substantial background in the world of wine. I remember an interview, I think it was in Decanter about a year ago with an owner of one of the known chateaus saying the garage site wines in Bordeaux couldn't have terroir because they or their family hadn't been making wine long enough. In essence what he was saying is you must have a history and your family must go back for generations of making wine from that parcel of ground. He said terroir was only made possible if the people working the land had the proper family background. I'll let other people deal with that concept, I can't.
AlexR wrote:1) The greatest are always criticized. Château d'Yquem will prevail. It is outstanding and doesn't deserve to be knocked.
2) I do, however, have a problem with "typicity". I'll tell you why. The French credo of terroir - one I mostly agree with, by the way - extends to considering that reflecting that terroir in the flavour profile a virtue. BUT what far more interests ME, and I think many other non-French consumers, is that a wine tastes GOOD. That it is typical is, to some extent, beside the point.
In other words, a Morey Saint Denis that really tastes like a Morey Saint Denis deserves notice IF, coupled with that typicity, it tickles your fancy.
Best regards,
Alex R.
Users browsing this forum: APNIC Bot, ByteSpider, ClaudeBot, FB-extagent, Google Adsense [Bot], RIPEbot, SemrushBot and 1 guest