Tuesday, September 11, 2018

Terroir Incognito

On Sharper Iron, a fundamental Baptist website I read often, one contributor linked an Amazon link to Gisela Kreglinger's The Spirituality of Wine, a book where the author attempts, in a semi-secular way, to present both the Biblical view of wine, as well as how the world of wine developed in Europe and the world as a whole, and finally goes into something of a dissertation on the risks of commodities vs. local products.


In other words, it's three books in one, in a manner of speaking, at least from a "fundagelical" perspective.  In the "first book", Kreglinger does what we would suggest any good fundamental Baptist ought to do; she simply takes seriously the Biblical passages telling of the ubiquity of wine, its blessings in moderate use, and its dangers in overuse and drunkenness. 


Coming from a Lutheran perspective, and from a family that has produced wine for half a millennium, however, she also feels compelled to discuss how the monks and nuns of old--and of modern times--developed many of the techniques used in wine-making, as well as most of the major hybrids/land-races of wine grapes. 


This leads to the most fascinating, confusing (to me at least), and controversial part of the book; where she discusses the differences between mass market wines (and even beers) and those which really speak of the climate, hybrid, soil, and more in the making of that wine.  Her writing has a bit of a "Wendell Berry" vibe, being a touch anti-commodity in the process.


And this is, really, why I read the book four times to try and grasp this argument, as Scripture simply does not speak obviously of things like terroir--roughly meaning "terrain", but in practice meaning all of the subtle factors of a vineyard that make its wine unique.  But that said, I did some thinking about the matter, and I remembered the case of Bezalel, the artist behind the Tabernacle and the Ark.  Noteworthy is that Bezalel used a number of supplies from various localities--the origin was, in a manner of speaking, the product.  Terroir, no?


I thought of Proverbs 22:29, where the skilled tradesman would find his work before kings.  I thought of Jesus' comment that the "old wine is better", and the amazement at the wine He made in John 2.  And so I am persuaded that there is a case to be made in Scripture for distinctly local products, to include wine.  So there is at least some Biblical support for the notion that we can honor a Bordeaux or a Franconia wine for its origins. 


In this section is as well a good discussion of the benefits and risks of alcohol.  Kreglinger is a huge fan of wine as an antiseptic, aid to heart health, and the like, but does not downplay the risks of abuse and addiction.  In responding to this, she notes that there is a huge difference between the risks of wine and of hard liquor, and that societies that enjoy wine simultaneously learn the methods of using it responsibly. 


All in all, I give this book 4 of 5 stars (corks?  glasses?), and the missing star is really because the author has tackled a huge topic, and simply does not have the space--or perhaps the inclination?--to fill in the gaps needed to go from the obvious Biblical truth that wine is a blessing in moderate use to the point of affirming wine as a local product instead of a commodity.

5 comments:

Hearth said...

One thing that our society seems to have utterly lost is the path between two truths. Wine in excess (liquor in excess) is very bad. No wine at all, with "interesting" sources of water, is also not a good plan.

Personally I don't care for much of it, but there was a locally grown Moscato that was rather nice. (We can grow wine grapes here, away from the coast).

One wonders if the local craft brew scene merits the same sort of approbation? It's not as if the wheat/hops are being grown here, even though we're now something of a beer tourist destination.

Bike Bubba said...

Mostly barley, actually, except for wheat beers--"weizen" or "weisse" in German. And Kreglinger says some very nice things about craft beers, as befits a Bavarian who's spent many years in the U.S.

elspeth said...

What Hearth said. The sense of balance has been lost in favor of hard and fast Sunday school rules on the one hand and let it all hang out (grace and freedom!) on the other.

Hearth said...

I don't see any fields of barley either... somehow. ;) Avocados, oranges, grapes... but not barley. :D

Bike Bubba said...

Mostly along the Canadian border, where it gets too cold for corn/maize. And not surprisingly, in Canada and Germany, but also in France and Russia.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_barley_production