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More wine successes from across the American heartland

PostPosted: Thu Mar 23, 2006 11:37 am
by Paul B.
A very enjoyable and inspiring read!

Trend-spotting at Wineries Unlimited

The buzz in the meeting rooms, bars, restaurants and hotels during last week's Wineries Unlimited, the biggest conference and trade show in the East, was more evidence of a wine industry beyond the West Coast that has visions of grandeur -- or, at least, acceptance on a par with the folks in Oregon, Washington or California.

New wineries, new winemakers, new wines: The event in Lancaster, Pa., sponsored by Vineyard and Winery Management magazine, offered a snapshot of new wine horizons in the heartland and East.

News from across the heartland

A suggestion

PostPosted: Thu Mar 23, 2006 11:47 am
by Robin Garr
Paul, as we sort out the differences between our forums, I'm going to suggest that news clippings about Eastern wineries and such be held for the Netscape Forum. That's a good place for them, leaving this wine forum more open for discussion of wine tasting and advanced wine issues.

Done

PostPosted: Thu Mar 23, 2006 12:28 pm
by Paul B.
Robin, I just moved the post over there. You can chuck this one if you wish! :)

Re: Done

PostPosted: Thu Mar 23, 2006 1:01 pm
by Robin Garr
Paul B. wrote:Robin, I just moved the post over there. You can chuck this one if you wish! :)


No need ... just a suggestion, as we work things out. Let's leave this thread open so others can participate in that process by helping with reality checks.

I'm just thinking that TWO Hybrid and Labrusca Lovers Discussion Groups might be more than the Internet can handle without crossing the event horizon. :roll:

Re: Done

PostPosted: Fri Mar 24, 2006 3:01 pm
by Bill Spohn
Robin Garr wrote:No need ... just a suggestion, as we work things out. Let's leave this thread open so others can participate in that process by helping with reality checks.


Yes please - if the intention is to leave the basic learners material on the other board, ALL of the non-vinifera material should also be posted only there.

This board should be limited to more advanced discussion and notes (and no one is as advanced in non-vinifera as Paul)

Re: More wine successes from across the American heartland

PostPosted: Fri Mar 24, 2006 3:37 pm
by Robin Garr
This is a tougie. I live in the East, I sometimes visit Eastern wineries, I even occasionally taste, and judge, Eastern wines, including Norton, hybrids and labrusca. I think these items are as legitimate for intelligent, advanced wine-geek discussion as Merlot or Plavac Mali.

But that being said, and I'm going to be frank about this in public and with Paul looking on, because I think he can take it: ANY discussion becomes ripe for parody when it's presented in overheated, promotional prose. To pick on Paul, although I'm really talking about ANY poster, I don't mind him posting a TN on any Fochin' grape he likes. But I'll pay more attention and take him more seriously if he can do it without the "amazingly awesomes," and talk about his own experiences. There's no real need to post every single article about non-traditional wines that comes over the news wire, and it's certainly possible to talk about non-traditional wines here, in proportion.

I LIKE it that this forum is open to discussion of any serious wine subject, and I don't want to have us gain a reputation like eB^H^H some places where anyone who disagrees with a Guru is held up for scorn. But I think we can do that without becoming known as The Hybrid Lovers Discussion Group, and I hope we can accomplish this by being mature enough to express our excitement in an appropriate manner. Somewhere between manic and depressive there's a nice moderate comfort zone. It's a good place to be.

Re: More wine successes from across the American heartland

PostPosted: Fri Mar 24, 2006 3:43 pm
by Paul B.
Hmmm ... I didn't post it thinking that it'd turn into a troll, but hey - it's Friday after all. Might as well sit back and see where this goes ... :twisted:

Re: More wine successes from across the American heartland

PostPosted: Fri Mar 24, 2006 3:52 pm
by Paul B.
Bill actually makes a good point in that (and I don't mean this in a self-aggrandizing way), I don't think there is anyone with quite the intensity of interest in high-quality artisanal labrusca wines here as me, and so if folks can't add to the topics in a commensurate way then it makes sense to draw sober conclusions about it. The genre that I'm proposing is in such a state of infancy that it doesn't yet have a unified geek community rallying around it. Although I consider myself a wine geek at heart, the specific topics of my vinous passion frequently form a separate whole. That said, I've been longing for more French and Italian wine in my vinous diet (except for our Ontario wines I drink practically no North American or New World wine at all), so it's fair to say that my TNs will be much more in balance with what the community at large is likely to be drinking.

Re: More wine successes from across the American heartland

PostPosted: Fri Mar 24, 2006 6:39 pm
by Neil Courtney
Robin Garr wrote:....

I LIKE it that this forum is open to discussion of any serious wine subject, and I don't want to have us gain a reputation like eB^H^H some places where anyone who disagrees with a Guru is held up for scorn. But I think we can do that without becoming known as The Hybrid Lovers Discussion Group, and I hope we can accomplish this by being mature enough to express our excitement in an appropriate manner. Somewhere between manic and depressive there's a nice moderate comfort zone. It's a good place to be.


I'm a little confused here Robin. Serious winegrowers grow non-vinifera grapes, serious winemakers vinify the wine, serious wineries sell the reulting wine to serious wine drinkers. The fact that many of us do not like non-vinifera wines, or in my case have never had the oportunity to even taste one, does not make it a non-serious subject. I agree about the 'amazingly fantastic' notes.

But now that we all know who starts a thread, if anyone does not like Paul B's postings, they are now easy to ignore. By the way that people are flooding into this forum when it has not been publicly launched, perhaps the Netscape forum will be a newbie only site, before they come on over here to talk with serious wine geeks. I can see no reason for Paul having to talk to newbies alone. They may have no idea at all about what he is talking about. I think Paul should stay here.

IMHO.

Re: More wine successes from across the American heartland

PostPosted: Fri Mar 24, 2006 7:01 pm
by Robin Garr
Neil Courtney wrote: I think Paul should stay here.

IMHO.


Absolutely, Neil. Nobody is being voted off the island, and if anything I said suggested otherwise, I regret that. No such thing was intended.

I am gently suggesting, speaking of Internet forum posting in general, that an excess of zeal can have the opposite of the intended effect and that balance is as important in Wacky Internet Personalities as it is in wine. :) And I'll drink to that with a glass of Chambourcin/Norton blend.

Re: More wine successes from across the American heartland

PostPosted: Fri Mar 24, 2006 7:12 pm
by Neil Courtney
OK, now you have piqued my interest. I have tried several Chambo's, and on Googling for Norton, I find that it is Vitis aestivalis. I had thought we were only talking about Vitis labrusca. Interesting.

Re: More wine successes from across the American heartland

PostPosted: Fri Mar 24, 2006 7:29 pm
by Robin Garr
Neil, actually I made up the Norton/Chambo blend out of whole cloth, but now I think about it, it might work!

In the context of the continental climates of Eastern US and Canada, vitis vinifera has always been iffy for many reasons, ranging from killing winter to too-hot, too-humid summers, although folks are having a little more luck with it in the modern age of high-tech agriculture. Basically, though, the regional industry relied on labrusca for a long time, French-American hybrids more recently, and Norton (aka Cynthiana), vitis aestivalis, as a rare but regionally trendy alternative. Few of the wines rise above the ordinary (and some fall well below it), but they sometimes develop regional followings just because they are local.

Re: More wine successes from across the American heartland

PostPosted: Fri Mar 24, 2006 7:47 pm
by Bill Spohn
One thought would be to have a separate section for non-vinifera discussion in the forum index - that way people would know where to look for hybrid matters.

Re: More wine successes from across the American heartland

PostPosted: Fri Mar 24, 2006 7:58 pm
by Robin Garr
Can't really see that, Bill. Why segregate one branch of the wine family? If we do that, where does it stop? A section for Merlot, another for Pineau d'Aunis?

Re: More wine successes from across the American heartland

PostPosted: Fri Mar 24, 2006 8:29 pm
by Bill Spohn
The distinction is logical, Robin. We are not talking about different clones or something, we are talking about different SPECIES of grapes!

Re: More wine successes from across the American heartland

PostPosted: Fri Mar 24, 2006 9:11 pm
by Robin Garr
Bill Spohn wrote:The distinction is logical, Robin. We are not talking about different clones or something, we are talking about different SPECIES of grapes!


Great point. The answer is still no, though. :roll:

Re: More wine successes from across the American heartland

PostPosted: Fri Mar 24, 2006 9:26 pm
by Sue Courtney
Neil Courtney wrote:....

The fact that many of us do not like non-vinifera wines, or in my case have never had the oportunity to even taste one, does not make it a non-serious subject.



Neil I am sure you have tried many non-vinifera wines in your life. That's what most of the West Auckland wine was 30 years ago. Gee, they even tried to make wine out of Albany Surrprise as well as the more popular Siebel hybrids. Not to mention the odd Chambourcin of very recent times - it's even used as a blended grape by Clearview, that esteemed Chardonnay and red wine producer from Hawkes Bay - they put it in their Blush, and that White Diamond from up north was an interesting drop. And what about that gorgeous ice wine from Canada, made from the Vidal grape?

Cheers,
Sue

Re: More wine successes from across the American heartland

PostPosted: Fri Mar 24, 2006 9:37 pm
by Randy Buckner
Neil I am sure you have tried many non-vinifera wines in your life.


As have many of us here. Washington does a lovely job with fruit wines (non-grape). I don't buy them, but I have enjoyed many a glass.

Re: More wine successes from across the American heartland

PostPosted: Fri Mar 24, 2006 10:03 pm
by Neil Courtney
I was not talking about hybrid grapes here, just the Native America varieties. Of which I now know there are two groups.

Re: More wine successes from across the American heartland

PostPosted: Fri Mar 24, 2006 10:50 pm
by Robin Garr
Neil Courtney wrote:Of which I now know there are two groups.


Hooboy, that's not the half of it. V. riparia, v. rupestris, v. rotundifolia ... there's dozens of 'em! (And they all make crap wine ... )

Re: More wine successes from across the American heartland

PostPosted: Fri Mar 24, 2006 11:38 pm
by Neil Courtney
:lol:

Re: More wine successes from across the American heartland

PostPosted: Sat Mar 25, 2006 3:08 am
by Paul B.
Robin Garr wrote:(And they all make crap wine ... )


Correction: And they make crap wine from them!

Surely one can't say that Malivoire's Old Vines Foch or Henry of Pelham's Baco Noir Reserve, or Turtle Run's Chambourcin, or Blumenhof's Cynthiana (granted, not all are pure native wines, but all have at least one foot that evolved in Eastern North America) are crap wines.

When one elevates the standard and desires to produce something beyond massively indifferent jug wine from a given variety, the result will simply be a better wine. They won't de-throne the grand First Growths or anything, but that's not the point! The point is that they can produce excellent dry table wines in our climate - and table wines are what most folks drink most of the time.

Re: More wine successes from across the American heartland

PostPosted: Sat Mar 25, 2006 9:00 am
by Robin Garr
Paul B. wrote:
Robin Garr wrote:(And they all make crap wine ... )


Correction: And they make crap wine from them!

Surely one can't say that Malivoire's Old Vines Foch or Henry of Pelham's Baco Noir Reserve, or Turtle Run's Chambourcin, or Blumenhof's Cynthiana (granted, not all are pure native wines, but all have at least one foot that evolved in Eastern North America) are crap wines.

When one elevates the standard and desires to produce something beyond massively indifferent jug wine from a given variety, the result will simply be a better wine. They won't de-throne the grand First Growths or anything, but that's not the point! The point is that they can produce excellent dry table wines in our climate - and table wines are what most folks drink most of the time.


Good job, Paul! Well argued, and the discreet absence of "awesomely amazings" makes this post one that doesn't trigger an intuitive "oh, yeah?" response. :)

Re: More wine successes from across the American heartland

PostPosted: Sat Mar 25, 2006 10:42 am
by Paul B.
Hey, Robin ... I can argue with the best of 'em (tip of the hat to you here) ;)

That said, I've always thought of muzzled enthusiasm as a strange animal. When I love a wine, I let it be known - and them's my favourite words by which to do it! 8)