Holiday Wine Tours in France
Terroir - Vive la Difference!
The wine market is currently witnessing a fierce battle between the
quest for consistency (or what some would call standardisation) and
diversity. This battle has been fought in virtually all consumer markets
over the years - from cars, to media, to beer, to music, to banking
and retail - to name but a diverse few, with diversity suffering every
time.
One of the wonderful things about wine is the inherent originality of
each and every bottle. Indeed you could drink a different wine every
single day of your life. The wine industry produces such a staggering
range of products because there are a multitude of factors that determine
the end product.
Different grape variety blends, varying vine-growing and winemaking
methods combine to create a huge range of different wines. However,
it is “terroir” that has the capacity to make every wine
unique. Terroir is best understood as the interaction of a vineyard’s
soil, aspect, altitude and climate: grapes have the precious ability
to express their own unique terroir though the scents, tastes and visual
impact of the wines that they produce.
This is why the majority of European wines are labelled and sold on
the basis of where they come from. Chateauneuf-du-Pape, Chianti, Rioja,
Bernkastel are all place names or “appellations”. These
wines are selling you the taste of their terroir.
Terroir, and the opportunity to taste it, is a marvel but also an obstacle.
Producing wines to reflect vineyard terroir generates a mind-boggling
range of wines for the consumer to choose from and vintage variation
(as a result of varying weather conditions) compounds the complexity.
Unlike in Europe, New World wine production is dominated by enormous
corporate entities who appreciate that many consumers are dazzled and
confused by the range of appellation wines on offer. As such they seek
to eliminate terroir variation and/or sell their wines on the basis
of understood and consistent grape variety scents and flavours. Consistency
is achieved by varying the blend of terroir each year or even blending
wines from different years. In addition, winemakers seek to impose a
style on the wines they produce via a greater level of control of the
winemaking process. As a result, the role of terroir and the variation
that it brings is severely diluted or even eliminated.
The contrast to those making terroir-based appellation wines could
not be more stark. The fermentation of wine from grapes is a natural
process and their guiding motto is to “have the courage to do
nothing” in the cellar so as to best express their terroir in
their wines. These people do not regard themselves as “winemakers”
but as “guardians of their terroir”.
Providing consistency in the wine market is important. It has expanded
the number of consumers and raised quality levels, particularly at the
lower end of the market. However, the industry must maintain its diversity
and not be reduced to producing a handful of standardised products and
tastes, with producers conjuring up variations via “brand differentiation",
packaging, image and advertising campaigns.
Rather than seek to loosen the role of terroir (as suggested by a recent
EU proposal), producers of appellation wines must better communicate
and market the notion that wines come from a specific place and that
the purchaser has the opportunity to taste the characteristics of that
unique location. It is ironic is it not, that certain standardised New
World wines now use brand names and advertising campaigns to evoke the
image of a certain romantic vineyard when in fact the influence of that
vineyard has been completely blended out.
© Copyright Olivier Hickman August 2007
Olivier Hickman is a wine merchant, vine-grower and winemaker who provides
guided visits to vineyards and winemaking cellars of top Southern Rhone
producers where he explains the influence of terroir, grape varieties,
vine-growing and winemaking methods on the wines that are tasted.
Web: www.wine-uncovered.com
Contact: +33 (0) 675 101001
|