FYI/FYE.
----- Forwarded message from The 30 Second Wine Advisor <wine(a)wineloverspage.com>
-----
X-Authentication-Warning:
winex2100.cniweb.net: nobody set sender to
bounce(a)wineloverspage.com using -f
To: Jim Ellingson <jellings(a)me.umn.edu>
Subject: 90 points? What's the point?
From: The 30 Second Wine Advisor <wine(a)wineloverspage.com>
Date: Fri, 11 Sep 2009 15:44:35 -0400
X-LibVersion: 3.3.1_4
X-Priority: 3
X-MSMail-Priority: Normal
X-MimeOLE: Produced by SwiftMailer 3.3.1_4
X-mid: amVsbGluZ3NAbWUudW1uLmVkdSAsIG0yMw==
X-Mailer: AC Mailer
X-Greylist: IP, sender and recipient auto-whitelisted, not delayed by milter-greylist-4.0
(
smtp-relay.enet.umn.edu [128.101.142.227]); Fri, 11 Sep 2009 16:21:52 -0500 (CDT)
X-Spam-Score: 0.001 () HTML_MESSAGE
X-Scanned-By: MIMEDefang 2.57 on 128.101.142.227
THE 30 SECOND WINE ADVISOR, Friday, Sept. 11, 2009
________________________________________________________________________
FEATURED WINE BOOK
Buy "The Psychology of Wine: Truth and Beauty by the Glass" through our
Amazon.com link for $32.36, a 28 percent discount from the $44.95 list
price.
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0313376506/robingarrswineloA/
________________________________________________________________________
90 POINTS? WHAT'S THE POINT?
I was browsing my local wine shop the other day, looking for a good,
reasonably priced red for dinner, and an interesting Southern Italian
Aglianico blend caught my eye.
But then I saw the advertising card dangling proudly below the display
bottle, bragging about the wine's 90-point rating from Robert M. Parker
Jr.'s Wine Advocate.
Well, excuuuuuse me! Call me an exception to the rule that high scores
sell wine, but I've never been an enthusiastic, er, advocate for rating
wine by the numbers.
I'm not so smitten by the purported romance of wine that I can't get
used to screwcaps or even good wine dispensed from a box, when product
quality and value make the sale.
But reducing wine to numbers turns it from a joy for the senses into
something more like chemistry for me. Moreover - although there are some
exceptions to this rule - my tastes generally depart from the Parker and
Wine Spectator crowd to the extent that their highly rated wines scream
"Danger, Will Robinson!" to me.
Show me a 90-plus rating, and I'll expect to find a big, alcoholic,
fruit-forward and oak-laden blockbuster wine in the bottle. The more
subtle, earthy and food-friendly wines that I love tend to grab scores
in the 80s from the usual suspects, and that's fine with me. It keeps
the points-chasers from grabbing up "my" wine.
So the other day, while browsing through a recently arrived wine book of
unusual intelligence and charm, I was delighted to discover that the
authors - the Australian father-and-son team of Evan and Brian Mitchell -
don't think much more of rating by the numbers than I do.
I'll review their new book, The Psychology of Wine: Truth and Beauty by
the Glass, in more detail before the holiday book-buying season.
But on today's point, I thought you'd enjoy this excerpt, which shows an
eclectic, idiosyncratic approach to the world of wine that's a long
stretch from the usual recitation of appellations and varieties and
vinification and terroir. In a world of books about wine science, it's a
book for liberal arts majors, and that's me.
Here's what the Mitchells have to say about points. What do you think?
"It's a shame today that scores rule the way they do. Taking wine
instruction "by the numbers," so to speak, is a dry and didactic kind of
learning. There's little soul in it. Taking wine instruction rather from
an expert's detailed tasting notes is akin to the method of the Socratic
dialogues, the 'maiuetic' method of teaching, described by the
philosopher Simon Blackburn as 'the method of the midwife, merely
assisting [them] to give birth to their own understanding.' ...
"Still, scores will endure because most people would riot if they were
taken away. Well, perhaps not riot, but they would abandon in droves
those publications that so dared, until a new breed of number-crunchers
arose to fill the vacuum that nature abhors."
Hmm. "Abandon in droves"? In quite a few years writing about wine, I've
generally avoided points scores. Perhaps that's why I am not rich.
But you have to admire, if not embrace, a wine book that in a single
long paragraph invokes Socrates, the philosopher Simon Blackburn and
"maiuetic" teaching ... yet remains immensely readable.
It's not a book for everyone, and it's not inexpensive even with the
Amazon.com discount. But I'm finding it irresistible, at least in small,
daily doses, not unlike a ritual glass of wine. If you think it's your
style - perhaps you took up English Lit, or maybe Philosophy, in college
- then I recommend it.
The Psychology of Wine: Truth and Beauty by the Glass is available
through our
Amazon.com link for $32.36, a 28 percent discount from the
$44.95 list price.
Click to view details or order from
Amazon.com:
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0313376506/robingarrswineloA/
As always, purchases made by using this exact link will return a small
commission to
WineLoversPage.com, helping us maintain our online
publications (and this E-letter) without charge.
Still wondering about that Southern Italian red? I expressed concern to
John Johnson, the genial proprietor of my neighborhood wine shop, The
Wine Rack in Louisville, and he reassured me. Sure enough, it's one of
those exceptions that "proves" a rule: Although it's as nearly opaque as
you'd expect from a 90-pointer, its fruit, licorice and subtle earthy
flavors are intriguing but subtly balanced, with alcohol held to a very
rational 13 percent. Good, mouth-watering acidity and soft tannins make
it a fine food wine. I'd give it a 90 myself, if I gave out numbers.
________________________________________________________________________
TODAY'S TASTING REPORT
FIDELIS 2005 AGLIANICO DEL TABURNO ($14.99)
A blend of 90% Aglianico with a splash of Cabernet Sauvignon and a dash
of Merlot, produced by Cantina del Taburno, this is a clear, very dark
blackish-purple wine showing almost a patent-leather look in the glass.
Pleasant aromas blend black cherry and a scent somewhere between fennel
and licorice on the aroma scale. Ripe cherry-berry fruit and subtle
earthiness is well balanced by tart, food-friendly acidity, with soft
tannins adding a touch of astringency in the long finish. Very good wine
and a good value, showing good balance and complexity. U.S. importer:
Vintner Select, Mason, Ohio. (Sept. 9, 2009)
FOOD MATCH: This balanced, acidic red met its natural match in a locally
produced rib eye steak, pepper-crusted and medium rare, natural grass-
fed beef from Dreamcatcher Farm in Kentucky. Showing its versatility,
the leftovers went very well indeed with fried chicken for lunch a
couple of days later.
WEB LINK: One of its U.S. importers has a detailed fact sheet about
Cantina del Taburno on this page, from which you can find a link to the
Taburno Aglianico and other wines.
http://www.skurnikwines.com/prospects.cgi?rm=view_prospect_detail&prosp…
FIND THIS WINE ONLINE:
Look for vendors and compare prices for Fidelis Aglianico del Taburno on Wine-
Searcher.com:
http://www.wine-searcher.com/find/Fidelis%2bTaburno/-/-/-/USD/A?referring_s…
________________________________________________________________________
TALK ABOUT WINE ONLINE
If you have questions, comments or ideas to share about today's article
or wine in general, you're always welcome to drop by our online
WineLovers Discussion Group, the Internet's first and still the most
civil online community. To find our forums, click:
http://www.wineloverspage.com/forum/village/index.php
Discussions are open for public viewing, but you must register to post.
Registration is free and easy; we ask only that you join following our
Real Names Real Format system, using your real name in the format "John
Doe" or "John D". Anonymous, cryptic or first-name-only registrations
are discarded without notice.
Once your registration has been approved, which usually happens quickly,
you'll be able to participate in all our online wine, food and travel
forums.
To contact me by E-mail, write wine(a)wineloverspage.com. I'll respond
personally to the extent that time and volume permit.
________________________________________________________________________
SUBSCRIPTIONS AND ADMINISTRIVIA
Unsubscribe:
We're sorry if you must leave us, but simply click the "unsubscribe"
link at the bottom of your Email edition to be instantly removed from
the mailing list.
Subscribe to this Email edition (free):
http://www.wineloverspage.com/wineadvisor
WineLoversPage.com RSS Feed (free):
http://www.wineloverspage.com/rss/
Wine Advisor Archives:
http://www.wineloverspage.com/wineadvisor2/archives.php
Sponsorship Opportunities:
For information, E-mail wine(a)wineloverspage.com
________________________________________________________________________
To Unsubscribe, please click here :
http://www.wineloverspage.com/12all/box.php?funcml=unsub2&nl=2&mi=2…
----- End forwarded message -----
--
------------------------------
* Dr. James Ellingson, jellings(a)me.umn.edu *
* University of Minnesota, mobile : 651/645-0753 *
* Great Lakes Brewing News, 1569 Laurel Ave., St. Paul, MN 55104 *