|
I know you can't read the writing in this photo, but the glow is so nice! Scroll down for legibility. |
I'm in a fight here -- a fight against sweetness. In the
United States of America, the color pink is associated with qualities including
softness, femininity, and artificial berry flavor. And I get it; flower petals
are pink sometimes. And although I'm sort of skeeved out every time I see small
girls wearing all pink, I get that too. It
is
a super pretty color for your t-shirt/pants/tutu/sparkle-tennies ensemble.
Likewise, I love strawberry soda -- I live in this country and I grew up
drinking strawberry soda, a fact that holds enormous meaning for good reasons
as well as dumb ones. Back to wine:
Provence* rosés generally taste like steel, raw beef, and rocks.
I'm avoiding "wine words" because I don't know very much about them,
or else I don't like them. So: Metal, meat, and stone -- these are all heavy,
hard things, the opposite of the pink I've just described. (Get Freudian if you want to; I don't want to.)
Great! Not sweet! But you're saying no, shaking your head,
pretending to gag. You say those are disgusting flavors for summer wine. And
they would be, if it weren't for the priceless alchemical genius of the vinting
process, which takes all that clunk and turns it -- light. Rosé is light in
color, light in "weight," and light in flavor, as opposed to a syrupy
chardonnay, for example. The reason I love rosé so much is that I believe it to
be supernatural, chaotic-good, because it lightens something heavy.
The result is unobvious. If the winemaking process lightened
something already light -- something simple or sweet -- then it would just be
silly like strawberry soda. (Unless it were idiotic, like white zinfandel.) But
because something happens between yard and bottle that transforms those bossy,
lumbering flavors into a floating wisp of a thing, the wine becomes both honest
and interesting.
I was extremely fortunate and got to eat dinner this week at the
Liberty Café in Bernal Heights, San Francisco, California. I had a glass of Henri Bourgeois rosé of Pinot Noir that
inspired me to write on the tablecloth. (Paper, it was paper, I'm not awful.) But I couldn't work out what I wanted
to say so I made a ... chart? Outline? Anyway they let me keep the tablepaper, which you see in situ above and legible below.
*This should say "Provence-style," because of
course I'm talking about United Statesian as well as French bottles here. And I
specify them, because the other ones, the rosés of syrah, the Italian and
Italian-inspired rosés, and the Spanish and Spanish-inspired ones, those
delicacies are for a future time.