These wines (Loire Valley red wines) are made of the cabernet franc grape, which in contrast to the inherent charm of Burgundy’s pinot noir, seems more austere and reserved. While the pinot noir grape seduces with sweetly fruity aromas and flavors, the cabernet franc often has a distinctly herbal quality that many Americans, more accustomed to a domestic industry that largely dreads the faintest hint of “green” in its wines, interpret as underripe and forbidding.“I don’t understand a country that likes so much the I.P.A.’s on the one hand but doesn’t like these,” she said.
The IPA of wines? Apparently Loire Valley reds are inexpensive so I'll have to look for one and see if it really is like an IPA.
2 comments:
Sounds interesting... This might be naive and betray my ignorance of wine, but I've often wondered if Brett wine could ever be a thing. I know it's considered a rather severe defect, but infected beer is too... except when its not...
I'm ignorant on that, too. Always thought vinters hated Brett and other types of yeast and bacteria.
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