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Wine (alt.food.wine) Devoted to the discussion of wine and wine-related topics. A place to read and comment about wines, wine and food matching, storage systems, wine paraphernalia, etc. In general, any topic related to wine is valid fodder for the group. |
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I have recently seen the term "open-knit" as a description of wine for the
first time. It was explained to me as ".......the wine is soft and approachable and may not have very much structure and tannins present and likely doesn't have the potential to improve measurably with time." The explanation went on to include: "made for near-term consumption with lots of fruit and a bit less backbone. They're fleshy and loose and very tasty but perhaps, to some, not elegant or sophisticated." That helped a lot. I "Googled" the term and found it used in several wine reviews but it didnn't come up in any of the 20+ wine glossaries I looked at. One review described an "open-knit" wine as tasting like it was "newly bottled". That sounded fairly consistent, but didn't suggest that the wine would not cellar. The term "TIGHTLY knit" did come up, however (@ Parker's site's glossary, IIRC). ...... described as young, with good acidity & tannins, well made...... but yet to open up. Can anyone explain the use of the term "open-knit" any better or differently than the above? The "tight" implication I get...... the "open" is less clear. What are some examples of "open-knit" wines that are crafted that way intentionally? Is (excuse me) White Zinfandel an "open-knit" wine? Thanks. |
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