Ian S wrote:Yes, the danger here is that if the benchmark is set that great Pinot Noir must taste like great Burgundy, then we've lost sight of that great Burgundian passion for terroir. A good wine reflecting its sense of place and with great complexity is arguably more interesting than an imitation.
I buy/cellar/drink plenty of Aussie Pinot. Some of the better ones can hold their own in a line-up of 1er Burgs, e.g. Hillcrest Premium, Hoddles 1er. Many are taking the concept of terroir to heart with all the single block releases. Plenty of interesting things going on with Aussie Pinot and I don't think the goal of most producers is to emulate Burgundy. Saying all that, I'd still rather only buy/cellar/drink Burgs. They have an X-factor that no Aussie Pinot can match. The only reason I don't is an order or two of magnitude difference in cost.
Ian S wrote:I love Nebbiolo, but I'm happy to try Nebbiolo from wherever, not just the Langhe. I don't set my definition of good being 'like Barolo or Barbaresco', but in being an interesting and tasty drink. I very much enjoy Ghemme, Gattinara, Boca etc. from the north of the region, and Donnas/z from the border with Valle d'Aosta, plus some Valtellina from Lombardia, usually in a lighter / bonier style and I prize them for that point of difference. Sfursat / Sforzato is not a style I've taken to but who knows. I enjoyed a couple of Aussie versions in strikingly different styles and even a good value one from Mexico. It will be a while before the newer regions learn the grape in their context, but I hope to see some successes as they learn
Me too. I quite like the Neb from Ar.Pe.Pe in Valtellina and I've got a bit in the cellar. But for my palate, all the best Nebs come from Barolo/Barbaresco. There's something about the terroir in Barolo/Barbaresco that just suits Neb so well. I've tried quite a few from outside Italy too, primarily from Australia & USA, and they pale in comparison to the norm from Piedmont. Some of them are certainly interesting expressions of Italian Neb. However, when taking cost into consideration (they cost more than many great Langhe Nebs), there's one less reason to buy.
Polymer wrote:This is where people get Burgundy wrong...Grand Cru Burgundy is not necessarily better than even Village...It is all about Producer, and then producer and then producer.....
Agreed. Plenty of expensive and not so good Burgundy around.
Polymer wrote:But I agree, in general AU Pinot is terrible...There are a few AU producers that are pretty good...but in general they're not. It isn't that they're not making Burgundy...but they're trying to make Pinot do/be something it isn't. Or maybe that is the only way they know how to make wine...
Just like with Nebbiolo, I think it's all about terroir. Pinot from other countries (NZ, USA, etc.) just missing that special something that good Burgundy has.