So
PK nudges me in the direction of a recent, unexpectedly strait-laced,
article by Andrew Jefford on the importance of writing comprehensible taster's notes. This
seems fair
enough,
and I can't fault Mr. Jefford's line of argument,
but it doesn't stop there: the article contains, nested within it, an
even more surprising piece of self-admonition, a great chunk of humility centering around the tendency of most wine writers to write
badly and
affectedly - and containing this mea
culpa from
Jefford himself: 'The language of tasting notes is practically
unhelpful, and at best seen as "bulls**t". I've often
thought this myself; indeed I feel uneasy for having based my career
in part on it.'
Well.
Now
I hardly know which way to turn, especially since I once took a
petulant swipe at Mr. Jefford for writing (among other things)
this, about a Merlot: 'The
2009 brims with richness (cream, vellum, faded roses) and
thick-textured, late-Romantic, Rosenkavalier-like
decadence'. There you go. Scroll forward a year
or so and
he's positively hectic with remorse, declaring that 'Most wine
descriptions possess zero literary merit', with the result that 'You
end up with wine nerds writing for wine nerds, in an excitable,
echo-filled ghetto'. Well, of course: most wine writing is a kind of
anti-writing, a resistence to sense, but what a mixed-up age we live
in, that Andrew Jefford should promote the idea that winespeak is a
bad thing.
Back
I go to the original piece - How
to write wine tasting notes
- my heart full of confused hope. And yes, Mr. Jefford, Mr.
Rosenkavalier,
is sober and to the point - No
fruit salad,
he warns us at the start, and he's right. Be
partisan
is another of his injunctions, but this amounts to not much more than
the assertion that
If
you like it, make sure we know that, and why.
Which is borderline gnomic and only gets me so far, but at least it's
plain-spoken. The thing concludes with another link, this time to a
Berry Bros. & Rudd-related guide, hiding under the sublimely
commonplace headline How
to understand wine.
This,
in turn, and to my growing dismay, deals with really basic stuff,
stuff even I have heard of although never properly mastered, stuff
like acidity, fruit, alcohol, tannins - I mean, aren't we implicitly
meant to be familiar with these concepts, so familiar that we can
dispense with them altogether and start reaching for the thick
textures and the faded roses? What, exactly, is going on here? Was
the dial of wine appreciation reset while I was looking the other
way, and now stands somewhere in the mid-1960s, a time when no-one
knew anything about wine - no-one except a handful of the rich and/or
privileged, people who embraced terms such as conoisseurship
and cellar,
terms so comically fusty only PK still feels comfortable with them?
I
return once again to Jefford's How
to write wine tasting notes,
armed with an averagely loathsome Montepulciano D'Abruzzo, acquired
from somewhere. The usual criteria: screwtop, 13%, price as near £5
as I can make it, hallucinatory copywriter's drivel on the label - A
rich red wine with layer upon layer of damson and morello cherry
flavours.
One
of those.
I
test the Jefford system. 1:
No fruit salad. Analogical descriptors are useful - if used in
moderation. Limit yourself to half a dozen at most.
Okay: it's kind of harsh and fruity, like a factory-made apple and
blackberry pie. 2:
Remember the structure.
There is no structure, so far as I can see, just a mainstream whoof
followed by an abiding sense of loss. 3:
Balance is all.
See 2.
4:
Be partisan.
I love this kind of wine, principally because it's relatively cheap
and available. 5:
Be comprehensive.
I've mentioned the screwtop, the price range, the copy on the label,
what else is there? Tell
us its past and future,
Jefford suggests, but this is a wine without either, only a coarse
and unedifying present, perhaps a hint of stainless steel containers,
the poetry of pipework and tanker trucks. 6:
What else? See
5.
And that's it, I'm done.
Still,
I
think Jefford is onto something, here. Given the mixture of snobbery
and pedantry that pervades most wine appreciation, I can't see his
revisonist,
back-to-basics ethos gaining much
traction, but we must hope. After all, it's human nature to discard
old cultures in favour of new. What
if we called
the new approach, Brutalist
Wine Writing?
It's
got a ring to it, it sounds as if it means business. No, New
Brutalist Wine Writing,
that's better. If it was a magazine, I'd buy it.
CJ
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