Search for:



Check out my other channel TopTenz! https://www.youtube.com/user/toptenznet

→Some of our favorites: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLR0XuDegDqP10d4vrztQ0fVzNnTiQBEAA
→Subscribe for new videos every day!
https://www.youtube.com/user/TodayIFoundOut?sub_confirmation=1

Follow Simon on social media:

https://www.instagram.com/simonwhistler/

Never run out of things to say at the water cooler with TodayIFoundOut! Brand new videos 7 days a week!

More from TodayIFoundOut:

Why Does the Yolk of an Overcooked Hard Boiled Egg Turn Green

What’s the Difference Between Brown Eggs and White Eggs?

In this video:

Outside of wine snobs, I think we can all agree that wine snobs are just the worst. This is not because virtually every study ever conducted into the field of wine tasting as a whole has concluded that it’s ridiculously easy to convince even the top sommeliers that $5 boxed white wine is the finest red wine ever bottled. Nor is it because wines they would happily sacrifice their first born to have a glass of and would have otherwise raved about, when told the glass contains a variety of some cheap wine they are to identify, are more than likely to claim it tastes akin to horse piss.

Want the text version?: http://www.todayifoundout.com/index.php/2018/07/the-wine-lover-meltdown/

Sources:

https://www.oxfordwine.co.uk/wine-snob
https://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2016/05/24/479163882/the-judgment-of-paris-the-blind-taste-test-that-decanted-the-wine-world
https://www.thespruce.com/the-judgment-of-paris-3510929
https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=0RQeKdT-JrUC&pg=PA218&dq=judgement+of+paris+%22laughable%22&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjwsPfix7_aAhVS_aQKHT9qCLAQ6AEIJzAA#v=onepage&q=judgement%20of%20paris%20%22laughable%22&f=false
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judgment_of_Paris_(wine)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steven_Spurrier_(wine_merchant)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierre_Brejoux
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Claude_Dubois-Millot
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domaine_Ramonet-Prudhon
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Odette_Kahn
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_M._Taber

Outside of wine snobs, I think we can all agree that wine snobs are just the worst. This is not because virtually every study ever conducted into the field of wine tasting as a whole has concluded that it’s ridiculously easy to convince even the top sommeliers that $5 boxed white wine is the finest red wine ever bottled. Nor is it because wines they would happily sacrifice their first born to have a glass of and would have otherwise raved about, when told the glass contains a variety of some cheap wine they are to identify, are more than likely to claim it tastes akin to horse piss. No, the fact that human psychology is so big a part of the whole wine mythos (and how we perceive tastes and smells) isn’t our problem here; humans are gonna human, after all, and everybody likes what they like, with human psychology often playing a big role. Who are we to judge? No, the real problem is a rather vocal subset of wine connoisseurs who are astoundingly snooty about the whole thing, making all the rest of us wine lovers look bad in the process. This level of snobbishness is particularly rich given that what some of them have spent thousands of hours of their precious time on Earth doing is nothing more than becoming an expert on grape juice- you know, the stuff (sans alcohol) that your 2 year old drinks at $3 a gallon… You might as well get highfalutin about your magnificent fuzzy sock collection. (Which, to be fair, is fabulously comfy I’m sure.) Perhaps nothing sums all this up better than the so-called “Judgement of Paris”- an event that would change the wine world forever (for the better). Besides the more productive outcomes, the event saw some of the top pearl-clutching French wine snobs throw a near year-long temper tantrum because they accidentally revealed that in a blind taste test they not only largely misidentified the American wine from the supposedly far superior French wine, but that they strongly preferred the American adult grape juice… The origins of the Judgement of Paris can be traced to a well meaning promoter of French wine and owner of a wine store in Paris, Steven Spurrier. Spurrier organized the event with the hopes of highlighting that the quality of wine coming from California at the time wasn’t nearly as bad as its reputation then held. He also hoped in the process to drum up some additional business for his Parisian wine shop in highlighting the many French wines that could be purchased there. Naturally, he, along with pretty much everyone else in the world, assumed the French wines would win the contest pretty handily. In organizing the event, Spurrier scouted what he felt were the finest wines currently produced in California and pitted them, deathmatch style, against their closest French equivalent. To judge the competition, Spurrier tracked down some of France’s top wine experts, including the then editor of The French Wine Review, Odette Kahn, as well as several professional sommeliers (the elite of the elite of wine tasters) of the French persuasion. All in all Spurrier was able to assemble a veritable dream team of wine-sniffing talent consisting of nine of the best palates in the business. To round out the numbers, Spurrier himself took part, as did American wine connoisseur Patricia Gallagher. Realising that accusations of bias would inevitably be levied against him if French wines cleaned house at the event, Spurrier opted to make the event a blind tasting and told his fellow judges to simply judge each wine on its own merits, not by any specific scale. Something his judges had no problem with. At first. Although Spurrier attempted to publicise the competition as widely as he could, sending invites to most every major media outlet he could think of, the whole thing was seen as being such a nonstory that only a single journalist turned up to cover the event- TIME magazine’s George M. Taber. Taber would later state he only showed up as a favour to Spurrier and, like most everyone else, assumed that the French wines would win hands down, which would likely see his article tantamount in interest to one titled “Water is wet”. Taber (who, unlike the judges, knew which wines were which ahead of time) quickly changed his mind though when he saw French restaurateur and chef Raymond Oliver say to himself “Ah, back to France” while sampling a Napa Valley chardonnay… As Taber would later recount in an interview with NPR, “I thought, hey, maybe I got a story here.” And oh boy did he have a story, with the subsequent piece he penned being called “the most significant news story ever written about wine.” Why? Almost every judge placed at least one American wine above it’s French counterpart while several, including a later mortified Kahn, deemed an American wine, both red and white, to be the best overall. In fact, the American wines as a group absolutely dominated the event, 1992 Olympic Basketball Dream Team style. While this still might seem like a nonstory today, it’s important to understand the context here. Again, at this point in history, it was generally assumed by pretty much every wine expert that French wine was vastly superior to all other wines in the world for a variety of reasons, including things like soil, weather, secret methods passed down over the centuries known only by French wine makers, etc. As Taber would later comment on the results, “It turned out to be the most important event, because it broke the myth that only in France could you make great wine. It opened the door for this phenomenon today of the globalization of wine.” Wine expert and author David White further chimed in, “The 1976 judgment totally changed the game. [The results] gave winemakers everywhere a reason to believe that they too could take on the greatest wines in the world.” Not long after this event, the creation of new wine vineyards across the world absolutely exploded. On top of this, according to the founder of the award winning wine brand Stag’s Leap, Warren Winiarski, wine makers also began more openly sharing information about their methods with others in the field. What this all revealed was that the French wine makers had fallen well behind the times in a lot of areas owing to keeping to various traditions and classical ways of doing things, whereas newer vineyard owners had been more open to embracing improved methods and technologies. Thus, thanks to this event, Winiarski states, “The wines of the world are better, the wines of France are better.” Going back to the Judgement of Paris, upon hearing the results, a furious Odette Kahn tried and failed to get her ballot back, reportedly desperate to stop anyone from finding out how she had ranked the wines, fearing it would ruin her considerable reputation in the wine world. When her efforts failed, she resorted to slandering Spurrier and claiming that the event, judged near exclusively by French wine experts, in France, put on by a guy who at the time only sold (and spent his life championing) French wines had been rigged against French wine… Kahn, and others, also saw to it that Spurrier was temporarily ostracized from the French wine community, initially making it difficult for him to stock the shelves of his wine shop as well as banning him from the prestigious French wine tasting tour for a year. After that year he still occasionally had trouble acquiring certain wines, such as finding himself banned from the Domaine Ramonet-Prudhon vineyard when he went there to make a purchase over a year later. (Not all was lost for Spurrier, however. He would later go on to win a variety of awards in the wine industry, including one for, ironically, “his services to French wine.”) But before all this, the French media responded by effectively burying the story of the Judgement of Paris. In fact, among the scant mentions of it in French papers from the time, some questioned whether the event had actually happened. One that did acknowledge it simply argued that the experiment was merely an example of “the silliness that can occur at blind tastings”, which, to be fair, that’s a valid point, though the overarching result of the event still stood- while exact results may vary from test to test, French wines weren’t in a class of their own anymore. That said, 30 years later Spurrier organised yet another blind tasting very much like the first to see if the results would change, but, again, this resulted in American wines winning top honors. This time, however, seemingly nobody was greatly surprised, nor upset. Turns out you can make great wine in a variety of regions in the world, not just on France.

36 Comments

  1. “Bottle Shock” the Hollyweird movie version of this true story. The son, who took the wine to Paris, still runs the family California vineyard.

  2. I had a science fair in grade school and I chose to do a blind taste test of cola, Coke/Pepsi/Diet/Generic brand, Coke won by a single vote. Not very scientific but also shows that professional wine snobs aren't as refined as your common soda drinkers. Also funny how people who think one is superior have no clue if there's no label.

  3. I did a blind taste test with diffrent brands of cola. Coca-Cola barely won.
    The results = ppl who drink soda are better judges than professional wine connoisseurs. (Coke being the most popular band of cola on the planet)

  4. That was the Nappa Valley challenge?
    I remember reading that article 20 years ago.
    new term:
    Wine Wankers…. please pass it on

  5. This is a big fail. There's plenty of criticism to be made of wine snobbery, and of how the preferences of unschooled drinkers differ from experts. However, there are differences in the quality of wine. The point is that the California wines were good. There are real differences in the quality of wines produced in various countries, including the "New World," e.g., Argentina and the "Old World," e.g., Italy, where the quality of wines have been improved tremendously. France did enjoy a mythical status, but what the Judgment of Paris did wasn't to explode the idea that French wines were good but rather that really good wine could be produced elsewhere.

  6. Seems like regardless of actual quality it's going to cost more if it's produced in France. At least when booze is what we're talking about.

  7. This story is detailed in the movie "Bottle Shock" with the late great Alan Rickman playing Steven Spurrier!
    Seriously a fun watch but the movie doesn't address the aftermath so this video is a priceless pairing 😉
    Side note, Rachael Taylor clean a Thrasher is hilarious and worth the price of admission.

  8. Its not about the wine. Its about its soul. And thats got nothing to do with its nationality. Or it does? Or doesnt it? Does it? Maybe its the soul. Just the soul?
    Snob. Snob? Or maybe the musik? Or something els.

  9. Can confirm…..slightly pricey (>$20) American wines from California or Oregon, are quite good. In fact, dollar for dollar, I find American wines to utterly trounce European wines. Naturally, the price is elevated for imports, but not THAT much. I feel like I need to creep into the $80 range to get the same delightful taste experience as a $20-35 bottle of American wine.

    So…..I never see a point in buying an import, unless its champagne…..and even then, that is just another french tradition…..probably holding back other parts of the world from making an as good, or better product.

    Great story.

  10. As much as the story is correct, your perception on wine and sommeliers is very ignorant. Yes, the French are buried in tradition, but that’s because it took people a long time to determine what grows best and where, and so they established their rules to maintain a level of quality

  11. Regional snobbery is wild. In the U.S. the "BEST cars in the world" are all from Germany. (Mercedes Benz, BMW, Audi… Even Volkswagen for some damn reason.) This is despite the fact that overall Japanese and even Domestic brands have MUCH better reliability. The only European brand with as good as (or better) reliability than Japanese or American brands is Volvo. LOL. Any day, I'd take a Lexus or a Cadillac (or a Volvo) over a Benz. But THAT won't impress the neighbors. LOL.

  12. I love how the name of the event is “The Judgement of Paris” it sounds like some event from WW2 but it’s just French people getting butthurt over wine

  13. The first sentence of this video is stupid and exacebrated. These studies that were done were on students of schools.

    Red wine is made by letting juices and skins hang out with each other, which is where the wine gets its color and tannin (also more aromas). White wine rarely gets any contact with its skins and as a result is clear with z-e-r-o tannins . If you died a white wine red (which is what these studies did) they wouldn't be bitter. Certainly there are mentods of extracting color without tannins, but red wines aren't void of tannins even at low levels.

    The people tested were stupid and below average in terms of experience in the industry. Most everyone I know in the trade wouldn't have an issue discerning a white wine from a red wine lol.

  14. Yeah, good wine can come from pretty much anywhere. I was on vacation in South America once and had some wine from Mendoza, and it was amazing.

  15. After touring Tuscany (and absolutely LOVING it) and having some great wines there, my family and I concluded that the wines in California are better (in our opinion). However the wines here were also at least 2X as much as in Italy.

  16. First 15 seconds and he brings up the "study" that "proves" somms can't tell the different between good and bad wine. People, try actually READING studies rather than repeating the news headlines.

  17. Also, the Judgement of Paris was a sham because there was no set grading criteria and all the scores were added together so you have people judging on COMPLETELY different scales but then just summing the results. If you use the actual scores to just give a normalized ranking then a French wine would've won.

  18. I came here from a short to hear the whole story, and it’s way better than I first thought 🤣

  19. Funny I personally don’t prefer wine from California. But I drink reds. I found the best wine I’ve had I was from Argentina or something and it was like 27.99. Very smooth. I’ve never went above 40 dollars for a fifth of wine. Typically I spend about 5 dollars.

Write A Comment