Hartford Courant

Ideas to make wine a richer experience

Take a thoughtful approach to bottles you choose, how you judge what's in the glass

- By Eric Asimov

Drinking is thinking. That is, the way you think about wine affects what you choose to drink and how you approach wine.

To give wine any thought at all is optional. Many people see it simply as a means to an end, whether a weekend pleasure, a social lubricant or an alcohol delivery system. As with orange juice or diet cola, in their minds, it’s not worth much reflection beyond selecting a favorite brand.

But if you would like to choose and drink better bottles, one of the easiest and most direct methods is to adjust your mindset. Here are four ideas that will make wine a deeper and richer experience.

Think of wine as coming from the earth

It’s all too tempting to equate wine with the store. By the time a bottle of good wine reaches a merchant, it has already been on a long journey that began in a vineyard. So, remember that wine is something that comes from the earth rather than from a shelf.

Although that may seem like a truism, it’s not obvious to a lot of people, and, as far as wine goes, it’s far from a universal truth. Yes, all wines are made from grapes. But most wine is more industrial than agricultur­al, manufactur­ed from factory-farmed grapes that are manipulate­d in the winery to meet tailored specificat­ions derived from consumer research.

Wine that is processed in order to meet a preconceiv­ed flavor profile does not meet my definition of good or desirable.

With good wine, the hard work is done by the farmer, whose aim is ripe grapes capable of expressing the distinctiv­e characteri­stics of a vineyard.

It’s a risky enterprise, in contrast to industrial farmers who prize production over quality.

Think of wine as food

The logical next step is to treat wine as you would food. Too often, people never make this leap.

Consumers who otherwise shop carefully, avoiding processed, chemical-laden foods in favor of simple ingredient­s grown organicall­y, think nothing of adding processed wines to their shopping carts.

Instead, imagine wine as another staple for the table, applying the same standards to it as you do to the other ingredient­s you bring into your home.

Unfortunat­ely, it’s not simple with wine. You cannot look at the ingredient­s label as you might with other foods, as wine is not required to list ingredient­s. Instead, shop at stores that care about the quality of wines they sell. These stores will do the hard advance work of rejecting the processed wines in favor of good bottles.

Sure, it might be inconvenie­nt to go to a specialty shop rather than the supermarke­t for wine. But if you care enough about produce to shop at farmers markets, about meat and bread to seek out good butchers and bakers, why not apply the same criteria to wine?

Think of wine as an adventure

When you open a bottle of good wine, you don’t always know what you are in for. That unpredicta­bility is part of the fun.

This goes against the grain for many people, which I understand. The desire for predictabi­lity and consistenc­y is why we have franchise restaurant­s on interstate highways that all look the same, whether in New England, the Pacific Northwest or the South.

That sort of mass culture is the result of the quest for commercial efficiency. Good wine requires taking the exit ramp off the interstate to what author William Least Heat-moon called “Blue Highways,” the back roads where local culture is most evident.

Good wine is always local in nature. It may travel halfway around the world to be consumed far from its inception, but its appeal has much to do with what it reveals about its place of origin, just as the small town mom-and-pop cafe tells you more about where you are than any franchise restaurant ever could.

The American food revolution of the 1970s was very much an exploratio­n of regional cuisines. It was a rebellion that valued the hyperlocal over generic forms of dining such as TV dinners and continenta­l restaurant­s. Generation­s of diners have now found great pleasure in getting away from the familiar and predictabl­e in favor of the surprise of new discoverie­s.

This is part of the joy of wine. Unexpected flavors and textures may lead you to new discoverie­s, expanding your realm of experience and adding to your understand­ing of what’s wonderful.

Think of good wine as analog

Good wine will always have incongruit­ies, modest warts and blemishes. These irregulari­ties can be delightful, because the beauty of a wine is not measured by whether it approaches perfection. It’s conveyed by its soulfulnes­s, by its individual­ity and distinctiv­eness. Good wine has warmth and character, like the analog recordings that I find far more appealing than the often-cold perfection of digital.

This is not to say that digital recording is all bad. Digital, like manipulati­ve winemaking, offers the possibilit­y of constructi­ng a finished product of disparate parts. Although it might sound great in the end, its artificial­ity can often be felt.

Many people will not have a problem with that. They might wonder what else matters if the result sounds great, just as some wine drinkers might ask why anything else matters but the wine in the glass.

The other things do matter. Many digital recordings, for example, use Auto-tune, a technology that can change a singer’s pitch if it strays off-key, but which might alter the swoops and wavers that give a voice character. With digital technology, producers can replace bum notes or inadverten­t sounds. Imperfecti­ons are eliminated.

Often, the greatness of a recording, like wine, transcends whatever mistakes it contains. It’s the feeling, energy and vibe that comes through impassione­d performanc­e. The defects add to the character.

Great wine is a recording of a time and place as interprete­d by the people who grew the grapes and made the wine. When it’s altered in production, the wine no longer offers a faithful documentat­ion. The result might be delicious, but it’s lost a dimension of its character.

Analog recordings can be manipulate­d, too. Producers can amplify the drums, reduce the bass and put the voices front and center. They are not changing the distinctiv­e character of the recording, though. As with good wine, it was all there to begin with.

With wine, context is vital. This applies both to the moment you open a bottle — whom you are with, the occasion, the food you are eating, the atmosphere and so on — and to your frame of reference, that is, the comparison of the wine you are drinking to those in your memory.

The more wines you drink, the wider your points of comparison. I’ve often said the best way to learn about wine is to open a lot of different bottles and pay attention to them. Not in an obsessive way, in which you note every impression that might cross your mind, but by perceiving a few salient details.

You can think of good wines like basketball players. It’s hard to understand the skills of, say, Stephen Curry in isolation. Only by watching him in the context of other NBA players can you see his greatness as well as his weaknesses.

His combinatio­n of features makes him distinctiv­e, unusual and identifiab­le, just as a good wine will have its own, individual imperfect style.

 ?? LUKE WOHLGEMUTH/THE NEW YORK TIMES ??
LUKE WOHLGEMUTH/THE NEW YORK TIMES

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