Goose06 said:
cecil77 said:
Quote:
Having an issue with what people are adding to their wine and thinking that's bad for you is one thing. Saying silver oak and opus one taste like twisted oak is a bit too much hyperbole for me.
I understand your point, but wine lends itself to such characterizations. From 100 years ago with words like "it was like walking barefoot through the dew on a summer morn" to 30 years ago: "a sensuously voluptuous wine that longs to be kissed" to the current "tastes like twisted oak stored in my grandfathers closet". Wine words have always been colorful.
And, of course, that Silver Oak probably DOES taste like "twisted oak" to someone who has experienced that taste enough to objectify it with words. Heck, a 100pt 2015 Spottswoode we used as a reference wine last month had discernable oak, which used to be a borderline flaw in wines. Andre Tchelistcheff himself once said something like "if I can taste the oak, I've lost the wine". But the style has changed to the point where most lower priced wines now use oak alternatives (chips or powders) to purposefully impart oak flavors. And those wines sell very well.
How does any wine taste like you are "gnawing" on a branch of any kind of wood? The hyperbole in that post was beyond the typical tasting notes description. Not to mention it is describing an entire brand of wine and not any particular bottle.
Lol whoops didn't realize how big of a hornets nest I would stir up with that comment. I don't like pretentiousness in the wine world any more than you and didn't want to come across that way. Kind of got caught up in the wave of making snickering comments about overexpressed Napa cabs.
For the record, I have Silver Oak in my cellar. I've been there with my wife and it enjoyed it before and I'm in no way saying I'm too good for a glass of it.
All THAT being said... A- it's not my preferred style of wine and B- I do think it's a wine that has an inverse relationship of quality and price over the last, let's say 20 years.
To point A- I'm not a huge Napa Cab guy in general. I do like a good muscular cab with a fatty steak, I mean I am a human being with taste buds and a soul. I just personally find areas like Santa Barbara county more interesting and tend to favor Rhone varietals and Pinot (which is actually my first love.) Or maybe I'm just an lolpoor with a bank account that can't afford a winefridge full of Napa Cabs, idk.