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[Drinking] Natural wines



Machiavelli

Well-known member
Oct 11, 2013
17,770
Fiveways
Margaret River is my favourite Oz wine region - with one exception: if I’m having a red meat laden BBQ, then you can’t beat a Barossa.

I can’t speak to your other observations since I’ve never visited. One day I will, hopefully. I’m envious that you have!

I have a longstanding prejudice against Australian wine.
 




Herr Tubthumper

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 11, 2003
62,683
The Fatherland
Sake. They are literally forcing me to drink champagne.
 

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sydney

tinky ****in winky
Jul 11, 2003
17,965
town full of eejits
I have a longstanding prejudice against Australian wine.

then i'm afraid you are clueless ...its the main reason i moved here and i am on my second bottle of rosemount 04 cab/shiraz this evening ...and i live in WA... wines here are over priced some of them not , i don't get how eastern state wines are cheaper than local plonk so i buy accordingly....i'm off down to Margaret river next weekend for a game of golf and a jolly up ...chilly but nice..:wink::cool:
 


Herr Tubthumper

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 11, 2003
62,683
The Fatherland
“ The wine list has lots of natural twist and turns. Just tell your waiter you don’t want anything that smells like it’s been filtered through the arse end of a pig and they’ll find you something crisp and friendly – in our case a bright white from Crete. You thought lockdown might have changed me? Nah. I still don’t want my glass filled with a liquid that suggests the winemaker hates me.”

Jay Rayner is back :lolol:
 


Herr Tubthumper

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NSC Patron
Jul 11, 2003
62,683
The Fatherland




Machiavelli

Well-known member
Oct 11, 2013
17,770
Fiveways
What’s the reason?

Most great dishes, drinks, etc, rely on balance. In terms of wine that means fruit/sugar and acid (and in the case of red and some white wines, tannins).
Let's take a white wine, being a wine dullard, I prefer wines with good (ie more) acidity -- German Rieslings tend to have this -- whereas especially in the 90s and 00s the more popular style would be for (sickly) fruit- (and oak-) driven Australian Chardonnays. These are the kinds of wines that are instantly appealing (first sip), but once you get onto the second glass, they're cloying and not particularly drinkable.
Australia deliberately surfed that wave of high fruit, low subtlety, low acidity wines for several decades and, as a consequence, have a reputation for that now. To be fair, they're moving away from it now.
If we translate this argument into beer, I like sours and not high alcohol, syrupy porters, etc
 


Herr Tubthumper

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 11, 2003
62,683
The Fatherland
Most great dishes, drinks, etc, rely on balance. In terms of wine that means fruit/sugar and acid (and in the case of red and some white wines, tannins).
Let's take a white wine, being a wine dullard, I prefer wines with good (ie more) acidity -- German Rieslings tend to have this -- whereas especially in the 90s and 00s the more popular style would be for (sickly) fruit- (and oak-) driven Australian Chardonnays. These are the kinds of wines that are instantly appealing (first sip), but once you get onto the second glass, they're cloying and not particularly drinkable.
Australia deliberately surfed that wave of high fruit, low subtlety, low acidity wines for several decades and, as a consequence, have a reputation for that now. To be fair, they're moving away from it now.
If we translate this argument into beer, I like sours and not high alcohol, syrupy porters, etc

Interesting to know. Thank you.
 


Aug 13, 2020
1,482
Darlington
Most great dishes, drinks, etc, rely on balance. In terms of wine that means fruit/sugar and acid (and in the case of red and some white wines, tannins).
Let's take a white wine, being a wine dullard, I prefer wines with good (ie more) acidity -- German Rieslings tend to have this -- whereas especially in the 90s and 00s the more popular style would be for (sickly) fruit- (and oak-) driven Australian Chardonnays. These are the kinds of wines that are instantly appealing (first sip), but once you get onto the second glass, they're cloying and not particularly drinkable.
Australia deliberately surfed that wave of high fruit, low subtlety, low acidity wines for several decades and, as a consequence, have a reputation for that now. To be fair, they're moving away from it now.
If we translate this argument into beer, I like sours and not high alcohol, syrupy porters, etc

Can't say I've ever had a problem drinking a 2nd glass of Australian wine. That would be in the last few years though.

It would probably do me good if I did to be honest.
 






wellquickwoody

Many More Voting Years
NSC Patron
Aug 10, 2007
13,911
Melbourne
From Vox - ‘natural wine has become a signifier of bourgeois taste in certain social circles’

Nuff said.
 






zefarelly

Well-known member
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Jul 7, 2003
22,786
Sussex, by the sea
There are different definitions of what makes wine natural but the main point is that sulphur dioxide is not used in the wine-making (or some people would say only used in small amounts on bottling). As sulphur dioxide is one of the products of fermentation, it is almost impossible to have a wine that is completely free of sulphites but natural wines have much lower levels than most more conventional wines.

SO2 is used as an antioxidant and to kill yeast and bacteria so unless the winemaker is very skilled and has an extremely clean cellar, many natural wines will be "off" - oxidised or spoiled by bacteria. Quite a few end up as a murky cross between sherry and cider with a bit of added vinegar. You may find that some beard-stroking hipster will tell you that this is how wine is supposed to be but it's not.

There are some sublime "natural" wines but there are far more that are absolutely horrible. And the good ones are often very expensive. And the bad ones are also often very expensive...

Most decent winemakers are pushing towards using lower amounts of sulphur as its use before bottling can deaden flavours but most wines below £10 have to use sulphur for economic reasons as much as anything. Cheap wine tends to mean more sulphur, however there is far less sulphur in wine than in things like dried fruit.

You have perfectly described my home made wine ( vines in the garden) made with no added anything . . . . Just about drinkable, and 'free' (very labour intensive) alcohol, but hardly a smotth relaxing drinking experience.
 


Goldstone1976

We Got Calde in!!
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Apr 30, 2013
14,124
Herts
I would describe myself as a knowledgeable, avid wine drinker and collector, with a sizeable cellar containing wines from around the world. There is not a single ‘natural’ wine in my collection, nor will there be. It’s shit. Hope that helps.

Lowish sulphur? Sure, providing the maker really knows what they’re doing. None? That’s like saying ‘I’ll have a steak, but make sure there’s no protein in it. Oh, and no fat either’.
 


Machiavelli

Well-known member
Oct 11, 2013
17,770
Fiveways
I would describe myself as a knowledgeable, avid wine drinker and collector, with a sizeable cellar containing wines from around the world. There is not a single ‘natural’ wine in my collection, nor will there be. It’s shit. Hope that helps.

Lowish sulphur? Sure, providing the maker really knows what they’re doing. None? That’s like saying ‘I’ll have a steak, but make sure there’s no protein in it. Oh, and no fat either’.

Yes, but what's your point?
 




McTavish

Well-known member
Nov 5, 2014
1,587
I would describe myself as a knowledgeable, avid wine drinker and collector, with a sizeable cellar containing wines from around the world. There is not a single ‘natural’ wine in my collection, nor will there be. It’s shit. Hope that helps.
To a certain extent that depends on your definition of natural. If you mean the absolute avoidance of any additives at all then you are probably right that you don't have any. But if you accept the more widespread definition of total sulphites below 20 or sometimes 30 or even, for white wines, 40mg/l of total sulphur then you may well have "natural" wines in your cellar.

I have tasted a lot of natural wine, some natural by design and some falling in to the wide definition of "natural" due to the practice of the winemaker. Many of the latter are fantastic, many of the former are not but there are still some good ones.

There is nothing about sulphur that makes it intrinsic to wine (as fat and protein are to a steak), it's just really difficult to consistently make good wine without it.
 


Goldstone1976

We Got Calde in!!
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Apr 30, 2013
14,124
Herts
To a certain extent that depends on your definition of natural. If you mean the absolute avoidance of any additives at all then you are probably right that you don't have any. But if you accept the more widespread definition of total sulphites below 20 or sometimes 30 or even, for white wines, 40mg/l of total sulphur then you may well have "natural" wines in your cellar.

I have tasted a lot of natural wine, some natural by design and some falling in to the wide definition of "natural" due to the practice of the winemaker. Many of the latter are fantastic, many of the former are not but there are still some good ones.

There is nothing about sulphur that makes it intrinsic to wine (as fat and protein are to a steak), it's just really difficult to consistently make good wine without it.

I don't disagree with the factual parts of your post (except, perhaps, the implication that 40mg/l of total sulphur (even in a white) could reasonably be described as 'natural').

It's your last phrase that drives my opinion: "it's just really difficult to consistently make good wine without [the addition of sulphur]".

Firstly, I would remove the word "consistently".

Secondly, and most importantly to me, given that assertion, why would one wish to buy such wines (which are also typically more expensive than the non-natural equivalent) and take the punt, since we agree that "many of them" are not very good?

I would estimate that I've tried c200 'natural' (by design) wines in total - the results would show roughly the following: 1 or 2 'very good' (92+, imo); 3-5 'good'; maybe 10 (88-92); 'ok, but I wouldn't buy it' (83-87); 100 'nah, thanks - pretty unpleasant' (75-82); 80+ 'utterly undrinkable' (<75).

If I add all the other wines I've tasted together (several thousand), I wouldn't get to 80+ <75 point wines in total. The balance is far, far too heavily stacked against me enjoying a natural-by-design wine to warrant the expenditure.
 


McTavish

Well-known member
Nov 5, 2014
1,587
I don't disagree with the factual parts of your post (except, perhaps, the implication that 40mg/l of total sulphur (even in a white) could reasonably be described as 'natural').

It's your last phrase that drives my opinion: "it's just really difficult to consistently make good wine without [the addition of sulphur]".

Firstly, I would remove the word "consistently".

Secondly, and most importantly to me, given that assertion, why would one wish to buy such wines (which are also typically more expensive than the non-natural equivalent) and take the punt, since we agree that "many of them" are not very good?

I would estimate that I've tried c200 'natural' (by design) wines in total - the results would show roughly the following: 1 or 2 'very good' (92+, imo); 3-5 'good'; maybe 10 (88-92); 'ok, but I wouldn't buy it' (83-87); 100 'nah, thanks - pretty unpleasant' (75-82); 80+ 'utterly undrinkable' (<75).

If I add all the other wines I've tasted together (several thousand), I wouldn't get to 80+ <75 point wines in total. The balance is far, far too heavily stacked against me enjoying a natural-by-design wine to warrant the expenditure.
For the factual part 40mg/l for whites and 30mg/l for reds and sparkling are the limits set out by the Association des Vins Naturels. Other organisations have different levels.

In my experience, the rate of success is getting better, however, like you, I wouldn't choose to drink natural (by design) wines if something else were available unless the particular wine had been recommended by someone I trust. It's a bit like Burgundy...

However, the natural wine movement has forced the entire wine world to examine the way it operates. To me it's a bit like Punk - there was a huge amount of rubbish, a few really good things but it changed the way people thought about music for ever.
 


Herr Tubthumper

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Jul 11, 2003
62,683
The Fatherland




Machiavelli

Well-known member
Oct 11, 2013
17,770
Fiveways
For the factual part 40mg/l for whites and 30mg/l for reds and sparkling are the limits set out by the Association des Vins Naturels. Other organisations have different levels.

In my experience, the rate of success is getting better, however, like you, I wouldn't choose to drink natural (by design) wines if something else were available unless the particular wine had been recommended by someone I trust. It's a bit like Burgundy...

However, the natural wine movement has forced the entire wine world to examine the way it operates. To me it's a bit like Punk - there was a huge amount of rubbish, a few really good things but it changed the way people thought about music for ever.

Really interesting contribution, and I like your punk metaphor. I'm with G1976 on his point about consistency, but will keep in mind your point about that improving. I went to the Loire a couple of years ago and in the bars in Tours there was so much natural wine about and enthusiasm for it, it made me pause and question my (prior) scepticism about them. I was also wowed by Thierry Germain at Domaine des Roches Neuves with his advocacy for natural wines, and their wines are certainly consistent but also intriguing -- the flavour and texture profile were something very different to other wines made from the same varietals. I think that intrigue is probably natural wines' big selling point. The area that I'm even more interested in in terms of natural wines is Beaujolais, which is producing some serious and stunning wines at present.
 


Herr Tubthumper

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Jul 11, 2003
62,683
The Fatherland


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