zoebisch01
Well-Known Member
It's like anything, without a broadened experience one can never learn to appreciate the differences and complexities of a food or beverage. You gauge it all on your experience.
Although my experience with Wine is much narrower than some and I cannot pick up on some of the subtleties that someone with much more experience than myself would, I can still differentiate for myself what I feel is a good Wine vs. a crap Wine. At some point in time the band of my experience may move out to exclude ones that at some point I felt were good. This has certainly been the case for me in both Beer and Wine.
As for Terroir and Beer, I really don't think this has hit us yet because it is all inclusive meaning that all the ingredients are local. The trend with growing hops in the backyard is a start for this. Actually it is a reversion to how things were done traditionally and not a new concept, it's just trendy. For the most part your ingredients did not travel 1,000 miles from all directions to be assembled in one location. It is a much easier concept with Wine as it is locally grown grapes and water.
...actually it kind of funny because I was thinking about how the hops being grown in various regions is going to change things. And it will change the hops. Genetics will only carry you so far, but it is the combination of genetics, climate, soil, etc that will inevitably lead to differences (possibly great differences) in the Hop varieties I grow out back and those grown say in the Yakima Valley, or in Hallertau even if I get the Rhizomes from there. I had a first hand experience with this last year. My neighbor grew Vidalia Onions and I grew Walla Walla Sweet Onions. I can tell you they were light years apart in sweetness. His 'Vidalia' (no discredit to him, he is a much more experienced gardener than I am) were hot and lacked sweetness. This is in part culture, but very much so what needs to be understood is that the low Sulphur content in Vidalia, GA is greatly responsible for creating the Vidalia Onion's reputation.
Although my experience with Wine is much narrower than some and I cannot pick up on some of the subtleties that someone with much more experience than myself would, I can still differentiate for myself what I feel is a good Wine vs. a crap Wine. At some point in time the band of my experience may move out to exclude ones that at some point I felt were good. This has certainly been the case for me in both Beer and Wine.
As for Terroir and Beer, I really don't think this has hit us yet because it is all inclusive meaning that all the ingredients are local. The trend with growing hops in the backyard is a start for this. Actually it is a reversion to how things were done traditionally and not a new concept, it's just trendy. For the most part your ingredients did not travel 1,000 miles from all directions to be assembled in one location. It is a much easier concept with Wine as it is locally grown grapes and water.
...actually it kind of funny because I was thinking about how the hops being grown in various regions is going to change things. And it will change the hops. Genetics will only carry you so far, but it is the combination of genetics, climate, soil, etc that will inevitably lead to differences (possibly great differences) in the Hop varieties I grow out back and those grown say in the Yakima Valley, or in Hallertau even if I get the Rhizomes from there. I had a first hand experience with this last year. My neighbor grew Vidalia Onions and I grew Walla Walla Sweet Onions. I can tell you they were light years apart in sweetness. His 'Vidalia' (no discredit to him, he is a much more experienced gardener than I am) were hot and lacked sweetness. This is in part culture, but very much so what needs to be understood is that the low Sulphur content in Vidalia, GA is greatly responsible for creating the Vidalia Onion's reputation.