"Great people talk about ideas, average people talk about things, and small people talk about wine."--Fran Lebowitz
Friday, September 18, 2009
Interview With A HoseMaster, Part III
What are you looking for in a wine?
Often I'm looking for backwash. Is it just me, or do you often find little pieces of food in your glass of wine, like a piece of bread or a little hunk of fat? I never really believe the waiter when he tells me it's just the amuse bouche. Hey, if I want to amuse a bouche I'll drop my pants and solicit sympathy giggles.
Oh, you mean what kind of qualities am I looking for in a wine! Ooooh, I love it when I ask myself this question. It's a really good question, and it calls for a very philosophical and poetic answer filled with literate allusions, vague terminology, and cool language that means nothing to anyone else but me. So it's like an Obama speech.
I like to think of my mouth as a wet laboratory, and the wines that I open are given little lab coats, sanitizer, and tiny little name badges before entering. Be careful, I warn them, the floors are slippery. Many of them fall anyway, they come crashing down in my wet laboratory and are swept away down the dark rabbit hole of my esophagus. But the ones with balance, the ones that are graceful and supple, they hang around the wet laboratory and carry out amazing experiments, though no animals are ever harmed in my wet laboratory tastings, and rumors of experiments on twins are patently false, patently false. Balance is key, for a wine that slips and falls on its bunghole is not a wine with the legs to go far, not a wine you want anywhere near the precious Erlenmeyer flasks of your trained palate. No, it's balance I'm looking for. I want wines that have the balance of a Baryshnikov, a Nureyev, a Molotov (one of those flaming ballet guys), a Mazeltov, not a wine that dances like a white guy in a thong too small for him.
Rudy enjoyed many a wet laboratory.
Are there any grape varieties you don't care for?
I've read varying estimates on the number of different varieties of vitis vinifera that are made into wine in the world, anywhere from 10,000 to 6,000 to the Wall Street Journal's best guess of 994.37. So, of course there are a couple I don't care for.
Gruner Veltliner--who drinks this crap? I don't like Austrian wine any more than I like skiing in Cote-Rotie. Every time I drink a Gruner, and I've tasted far more than I needed to, I'm thinking, "Hell, I could be drinking some killer Riesling from Alsace and instead I'm stuck with this pathetic glass of Windex." But I'm a guy, so I finish it anyway and pretend I like it. Like you do when you force yourself to have sex with a woman you know you shouldn't be having sex with so you think about Halle Berry the whole time in order to consummate the whole deal. So drinking Gruner is like that without the erection. This is a grape that is quickly losing its cachet, and the Gruner the better.
Petite Sirah--OK, it's a hybrid, like a Prius, and hybrids are trendy, and I have had a Petite Sirah here and there that I've liked, and that I would drink given that my choice were it or Gruner Veltliner, but, sorry Valvoline fans, I don't really much like Petite Sirah. Drinking it is like watching Jay Leno--it's just loud, predictable and overhyped. It's fine that others like it. Hell, people like professional wrestling, American Idol, Oprah and lots of other mind-numbing, insipid nonsense, why not Petite Sirah? Just not for me. Give me Durif any day of the week.
If you could visit one wine-growing region you've never visited, where would it be?
Austria.
What's the most difficult job in the wine business?
Oh, that's a tough one. I think it's the person who writes the back labels on wine. Sure, viticulture is hard and demanding work, making barrels is hot and difficult, but coming up with those little wine haikus on the backs of bottles is really hard. Of course, in the good old days there weren't any back labels; now not only do most California wines have them, but also most of the women who make and sell them. I could show you pictures. Right, using this while operating heavy machinery can be hazardous to your health. Back labels came about mainly because of the anti-alcohol lobby that forced the "Contains Sulfites" warning and the health warning onto bottles of wine in an effort to scare folks away from the wonders of the grape. Not wanting to put those party pooping warnings on the front label, wineries created back labels. And as long as you have a back label you might as well use it to wax ecstatic about your winery in 25 words or less. And now, of course, it's become a place for the ubiquitous bar code. But never buy wine with a bar code! Screw the sulfites, it's wines with bar codes that will kill you. Buying a wine with a bar code is like buying milk a week past the expiration date, or looking for romance on Match.com--you know it's damaged goods but you're trying to get off cheap.
All hail the back label writers! They spend hours and hours writing for little or no pay, they never feel the need to check for typos or grammar, much of what they say has been said a thousand times before and better, and no one ever reads their work.
Bloggers, these are our brothers!
Okay so I have to veto the photos, no one in this business looks like either of those. I do however have a picture of Gary V. in a too small thong, (my eamil is a scary place) so you should have consulted with me before posting. Premature posting is rampant in the blog world, they have creams, (they don't work..ahem, I'm told) and with blogging becoming the "thing that all the cool kids are doing" a pill is on its way, but if your post takes you more than 4 hours you may want to consult Dr Vino.
ReplyDeleteGruner is an inside joke, sommeliers are laughing their asses off. "No you don't want a Riesling or Alsatian Pinot Gris. You want Gruner Veltliner, it's all the rage and yes it is worth $90.00 a bottle"...snicker, "saps".
So in the interest of the "Interview with The HoseMaster" I want in on this action...there's some shit I wanna know too.
1) Have you ever met a blogger you didn't hate?
2) Do you swallow?
3) If you do is there any wine you could not?
4) How many people did you have to pay to link and unlink your site to get you to the perfect #69 sweet spot in the top 100 wine blogs?
5) Where might one pick up one of those lab coats to skate along that palate of yours?
6) Some people might think you are an evil perv...do you dig that?
7) Brix Chicks, hot or not?
8) Are you Alder's alter ego?
9) People often elude to your, "blog squeeze" ...how well do you actually know Puff Daddy?
10) If I had something I wanted you to taste so you accept samples?
Answer to No. 9: Not as well as he knows you, Sam. I mean, so far, he has not tried to get into MY lab coat.
ReplyDeleteMy Gorgeous Samantha,
ReplyDeleteSorry for the delayed response--I was busy having my palate cleansed. Stanley Steamer has a deal right now. You know, it feels good to have myself shagged.
Answers, though I normally refuse interviews, just for YOU.
1. I don't hate bloggers. I hate what they write, if you call that writing.
2. I don't swallow, I'm all about gags.
3. See above
4. I didn't have to do any of that--I have perfect 69 Karma.
5. My palate is always open for you to skate on, lab coat or no lab coat. Is the plural of lab labia?
6. Perv, yes; Evil, no.
7. The Brix Chicks? Hot? Maybe not, but they are a ton of fun, on a good day.
8. Alder is the Mister Rogers of wine blogs. I'm the Lewis Carroll. Which rabbit hole do you choose?
9. My Gorgeous Samantha, I hate it when you're jealous. You're my One and Only.
10. I accept samples but do not promise a positive review. I do promise I will spend a lot of time with it in my mouth.
When I was little I thought Mr. Rogers was creepy and I had a crush of Oscar the Grouch so looks like I'll be chasing your little white rabbit down whichever hole you lead me.
ReplyDeleteYou are hilarious. Cheers to the back label writers!
ReplyDeleteThanks ZinfanGirl,
ReplyDeletePlease stop by and chime in as often as you like. We're friendly folk around here. Good luck with your new blog.
Ok... I know nothing about wine (perhaps I should start a blog out in California?) but my parents (who you recently helped tour Napa Valley) turned me on to you. And while I can't claim to understand half of what they tell me about wine, let alone all that you write, I am hooked. Oh... and I disagree with Samantha, keep posting the pix.
ReplyDeleteThe Neverking