Gripes and opinions 2-5-2025

Gripes and opinions 2-5-2025

Author: Gus Clemens February 4, 2025 Duration: 4:46

This is the weekly column

Wine columnists are expected to have opinions, and I have many. Here are four to rile up readers.

• Stemless wine glasses. They do hold wine and they are harder to break and easier to clean than traditional stemware, but they also commit three cardinal sins for wine enjoyment. First, you have to hold the bowl to use them. That means fingerprint smudges on the glass, diminishing a vital part of wine enjoyment—admiring and evaluating the wine’s color. Second, it is somewhat harder to swirl wine in a stemless. Third, bowl holding warms the wine, diminishing the taste of the wine. See, swirl, smell, sip, and savor are classic—if simplified—elements for tasting wine. Stemless glasses mess with three of the five elements.

• Over-inflated prices and heavy bottles. You produce a decent $30 bottle of wine. Then you put it in a very heavy bottle and charge $60. Studies indicate if people know the price and feel the bottle weight, they consider the heavy bottle, higher-priced wine a better wine than the exact same wine poured from a lighter bottle with a lower announced price. Price is an imperfect indicator of quality. Bottle weight has no impact on wine quality.

• Commodity/supermarket wines with added sugar, high alcohol, and oak. I get it, many people, especially occasional sippers, enjoy wine with those qualities. If that is good wine for you, enjoy away. But sweetness, high alcohol, and big oak are the enemy of wine’s best place in your life—paired with food. Also note, added sugar, elevated alcohol, and oak are proven ways to hide flaws of inferior wines.

• The ABC (Anything But Chardonnay) crowd. I once was part of that throng when the chard I tasted was suffused with butter and overladen with oak. Thankfully, those days are passing, and many California chardonnay makers have seen the humiliating error of their ways and now strive to strike a balance between reasonable and food friendly alcohol, complex layering of fruit flavors, and a lingering finish. Chardonnays with no oak are lean and crisp with stone fruit flavors. Chardonnays with appropriate oak present fuller body and a creamy mouthfeel. If you have lingering antipathy toward chardonnay, try one of today’s quality chards to change your mind.

What are your gripes and opinions?

Tasting notes

• Stag’s Leap Wine Cellars KARIA Chardonnay, Napa Valley 2022: Graceful, fruit forward, some depth and complexity. Nice Napa chard from historic maker. $36-50 Link to my review

• Austin Hope Cabernet Sauvignon, Paso Robles 2021: Plush, smooth, powerful cab. Luxurious instead of smack-your-face power. $56-75 Link to my review

Last round

My four food groups: cabernet, chardonnay, malbec, Champagne.



This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit gusclemens.substack.com/subscribe

There’s a lot of noise in the world of wine, but Gus Clemens on Wine cuts through it with clarity and a good dose of humor. Drawing from his widely syndicated newspaper column and his daily online posts, Gus Clemens brings his accessible expertise directly to your ears. This isn’t a stuffy lecture series. Instead, each episode feels like a relaxed conversation with a knowledgeable friend who genuinely wants you to enjoy the journey as much as the glass in your hand. You’ll hear straightforward reviews, fascinating stories from wine history, and practical insights that make the entire subject feel approachable and fun. The podcast naturally extends Gus’s written work into a warm, audio format perfect for listening during a commute, while cooking, or simply relaxing. Whether you’re just starting to explore beyond the supermarket aisle or you’re a seasoned enthusiast looking for a fresh perspective, this series demystifies topics from grape varieties and regions to pairing ideas and the latest trends. It’s about the culture, the people, and the stories behind the bottle, all delivered with a consistent, engaging voice that turns every episode into a pleasant discovery. Tune in for a genuinely user-friendly guide to the wide, wonderful world of wine.
Author: Language: English Episodes: 100

Gus Clemens on Wine explores and explains the world of wine in simple, humorous, fun posts
Podcast Episodes
Nebbiolo—kings and queens 12-4-2024 [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 4:35
This is the weekly columNebbiolo is the extraordinary grape closely identified with the Piedmont region of northwestern Italy and particularly with the region’s great wines: Barolo and Barbaresco. Let’s explore.The origi…
White wine ascendant 11-27-2024 [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 3:49
This is the weekly columnWine is in turmoil. People are turning to alcohol alternatives. Red wine sales are down, white and rosé are up. French and Italians and Spanish are drinking less wine. There is a glut of wine. Wh…
Thanksgiving pinot noir 11-20-2024 [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 4:36
This is the weekly columnThanksgiving is the great American gastronomic holiday. Halloween is for foolishness, costumes, and candy. Christmas is for worship, family, and unseemly lust for gaudily wrapped material goods (…
Wine barrels 11-13-2024 [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 4:11
This is the weekly columIt takes two to four centuries to grow the oak tree for a wine barrel. Then, after tree harvest, four, usually more, years to season the wood and the staves. Finally, it is time to turn the staves…
Wood and wine 11-6-2024 [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 4:09
This is the weekly columnWine is an agricultural product. Hardly an earth-shattering revelation. But consider its scope. Not just wine vines, as essential as they may be, but in many cases—trees.Wine and wood have a marr…
Wine odds and ends 10-30-2024 [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 3:54
This is the weekly columnSome facts and trivia to lighten your mood as we prepare for the horrors of “fall back” when the government gives back the imaginary hour it stole from us on the second Sunday in March.• Do heavi…
Halloween and wine 10-23-2024 [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 4:24
This is the weekly columnHalloween is next week, but if you are giving wine advice it’s best to give your audience some time to act on it.First, I know of no decent pairing of wine with treacly sweet trick-or-treat candy…
Wine column reflections 10-16-2024 [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 4:05
This is the weekly columnOctober begins the 17th year of this wine column. Reflections.• Quality wine is made by grape farmers in a vineyard, not by lab coats in a winery. When this column started, I could enjoy mass pro…
Alcohol risks 10-9-2024 [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 4:11
This is the weekly columnScare headlines: “Drinking any alcohol is a cancer risk.” Well, okay, the question is how much of a risk?In this discussion, remember the adage popularized by Mark Twain: “Three types of lies. Li…
Wine name revolution 10-2-2024 [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 4:19
This is the weekly columnIf you go into almost any wine shop, liquor store, or supermarket wine section in the United States—and now in most places in the world—you will find wine bottles arranged and named by the variet…