There was an article in the SFGate last week about federal law regarding varietal percentages in wine. That’s here: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.c ... QU4PD1.DTL
The opening paragraph reads as follows:
Whatever the strengths of the federal government, winemaking is surely not among them. Yet many red wine-loving consumers delegate that power to it.
The final sentence is
Don't let the feds rule your wine choices.
I thought those passages were quite clear in their meaning. I wrote to Blake Gray, the author, as follows:
Dear Mr. Gray,
Seems to me you have nearly everything backwards. It's true that federal law requires 75% of a wine to be of on variety in order for the winery to call it by that name, but that has nothing to do with winemaking as such. The federal government in no way requires the winemaker to call it Cabernet Sauvignon. That's driven by marketing. Likewise, as you say, no one cares if Chateau Margaux is more than 75% Cabernet Sauvignon, but they don't call it Cabernet Sauvignon, do they? They also don't market a Chateau Margaux Merlot, a Chateau Margaux Cabernet Franc and a Chateau Margaux Petit Verdot, either. Instead, they make the best wine they can from their own grapes, and sell it under their own name. No law is stopping any California producer from doing the same.
The law requiring at least 75% varietal content (it's 90% up here in Oregon, by the way, except for Bordeaux-style blends, which allow 75%) is no more than truth in advertising, so that the customer has some idea of what's in the bottle. Would you prefer the days when a producer could put Chardonnay on the label with a 51% content, and make the rest up with French Columbard or Thompson Seedless? Personally, I'd like to see a tiered system, with 90% or even 95% for a single variety designation, and a "Blend" designation, such as "Cabernet Sauvignon Blend" with at least 75%. In either case, all components of the blend should be stated on the label. I'd also like to allow "Bordeaux-style blend" and "Rhone-style blend" on the label for blends using onlly the traditional grapes from those regions, at any concentration, but the EU isn't going to allow that.
He responded to me that I obviously had not read the paragraph which starts, “It’s a fair law.” I responded to him that I had, and that his opening and closing paragraphs still make it clear that he was blaming federal law for marketing decisions.
He wrote back to me, basically telling me I’m stupid. A couple of excerpts:
“Isaac, I'm sorry if the writing of this story was too complicated for you.”
“The writing is probably too subtle for you because wine consumers are also newspaper consumers. We don't like to directly tell our readers that they're being stupid…”
So, is it me? Am I being obtuse? Or is Mr Gray being an ass? Maybe both?