While I have tasted wine that
has inspired me to howl in delight (and derision), can the moon and the stars affect
(and effect) our enjoyment of wine? Along with some other writers*, I am
participating in an experiment with organic producer Avondale where we are tasting their wines
over a series of ‘fruit’, ‘leaf’, ‘flower’, and ‘root’ days in accordance with
a biodynamic lunar calendar.
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Avondale's snail control patrol disembarking from their duck mobile. |
The assumption is that these
lunar calendar days affect the wine and/or our perception of wine. The moon’s, (and
other celestial bodies) affect on a number of natural phenomena is well
documented including ocean currents and tides, movement of plant sap and
generally having a significant (gravitational) affect on many earthly fluids. After
all, we are mere ‘bags of hairy soup’ as zoologist and author Desmond Morris
once said, or at least I think it was him.
Sociologists will tell you
that crime and violence increase at fall moon and more babies are conceived
during a waxing moon – and perhaps a little more wine is drunk. The challenge
to make the results of such a test compelling is that there are so many
vagaries including atmospheric pressure, our bio-rhythms, the wines evolution
in bottle (and glass, making it a moving target) and then mood, setting, company,
temperature etc, can all have an effect.
Wine is considered a ‘living’
entity in that there are ongoing – mostly organic chemistry – processes that
occur during maturation and while in glass when exposed to more oxygen, for
example.
Leading UK retailers like Marks &
Spencer and Tesco (with their armies of MWs, wine technicians, wine buyers etc)
appear to have seen and heard enough evidence to make them consult the lunar
calendar when scheduling their tastings.
M&S’s resident winemaker Jo Ahearne MW says that ‘on
fruit days, the aromatics in the whites are more present and the tannins in the
reds are suppler; on a root day, the fruit flavour is muted and the tannins are
harsher.’
German-born Maria Thun and her son Matthias believe the
answer lies in the moon. Maria has gardened all her life and is an authority on
biodynamics; she publishes an annual biodynamic sowing and planting calendar
translated into 18 languages to advise gardeners on when to carry out their
chores.
Based on more than 55 years of biodynamic research and
experimentation, she has now published a biodynamic calendar (2010 was the
first) for wine drinkers, advising when wines are likely to be at their best. The theory is that fruit and flower days would be more
beneficial to wine-tasting, while leaf, and especially root days would be less
auspicious.
*Avondale proprietor Johnathan Grieve,
winewriter and educator Cathy
Marston, sommelier Higgo Jacobs, bloggers Hennie Coetzee and Maggie Mostert,
Wine Extra editor Maryna Strachan and Platter’s editor Philip van Zyl.
As for day 1, it seems we all felt it was a fruit day. We will be tasting throughout
May and results will be published here and on John Platter’s and Avondale’s
website. The twitter hashtag lunatastetest.
I'm looking forward to the second tasting this afternoon. :-)
ReplyDeleteI really look forward to your results - it would be interesting to see how the moon cycles affect your taste perceptions!
ReplyDeleteHi thanks for sharing the information.
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