How a centuries-old technique became a modern cultural lightning rod—and why the argument misses the point
One can imagine re-reading this essay substituting "rosé" for "orange," because pink is often treated in aggregate rather than in specific.
"I'll have the Chablis."
"I'll have the Sonoma Coast Pinot."
"I'll have the Gravner."
"I'll have THE ROSÉ."
And indeed that's why so much BTG rosé is SO BAD, and there's so much great rosé that gets overlooked.
Exactly.
One can imagine re-reading this essay substituting "rosé" for "orange," because pink is often treated in aggregate rather than in specific.
"I'll have the Chablis."
"I'll have the Sonoma Coast Pinot."
"I'll have the Gravner."
"I'll have THE ROSÉ."
And indeed that's why so much BTG rosé is SO BAD, and there's so much great rosé that gets overlooked.
Exactly.