As I suspected, I failed the fortified wine test as part of
my impossible WSET Diploma quest. I
learned of this a few weeks ago, but frankly it was just a confirmation of what
in my heart I already knew. I had flamed
out during the test in such a spectacular fashion that it may even now be
discussed in hushed whispers deep in the bowels of the WSET headquarters. I looked at three obvious port wines and
somehow talked myself into the idea that they were three obscure southern French
fortifieds. Those wines I wrote down are
so obscure, they might not even exist.
It was like looking at a hippopotamus and saying “That’s a Pegasus!”. I can’t really explain my actions. It was failure pure and simple.
I now have a chance to re-take this exam in November. This means I have to re-immerse myself in
fortified wines like port, sherry and madeira.
No one in America has purchased as much madeira as I have in the last
year since Ben Franklin in the late 1770s. I have probably moved the madeira market 18%
just by purchasing 6 bottles. There is
so little madeira made and sold in the United States, there are right now Portuguese
industry analysts trying to figure out the reasons behind “The Great American
Madeira Renaissance of 2016”. They will
be equally confused when this “emerging American market” has the bottom drop
out of it when I pass this damn exam in 7 weeks and never buy another madeira.
I passed my spirits exam, which is great news. The great news wasn’t passing the exam as
much as it was not having to continue to drink massive amounts of scotch,
bourbon and rum. That whole experience
led me to develop a taste for these liquors as well as provide a glimpse into a
possible future where I am experiencing blackouts on a regular basis as I lurch
around my community holding a highball glass.
While my classes are certainly very advanced, the folks at WSET did not
teach me what is in bourbon that makes the drinker feel compelled to ask others
“you know what the fuck is wrong with you?”.
Maybe it is the char of the barrels.
All I know is that there should be a chapter in that book that points
out the very real possibility of receiving a “Kentucky Ass Whipping” with too
many servings of malt grain spirit. I am
going to slowly back away from these spirits much as one would an angry stray
dog.
I am now gathering up sherries and ports to resume a tasting
regimen. A local shopkeeper looked down
in embarrassment as I came to the counter with a fino, oloroso and amontillado
sherry last week. He knew I must have
failed. I know he knew. Why else would I be buying an oloroso sherry
on a 90 degree day? No one likes these wines. Not even the people that make them. I am probably the
only person that has bought a sherry in that joint in the last 180 days. Oh the shame!
Oh the humanity! The real problem
is more than my wounded pride though.
The real issue is that I suddenly can’t taste. I have now become unable to taste key markers
for wines, and I can’t explain it. Last
week I thought a Chateauneuf du Pape was a domestic pinot noir. This is like saying a Guinness Stout was a
Miller Lite. I mistook a Washington
viognier for a French chardonnay. I am
suddenly the wine equivalent of Chuck Knoblach tossing a throw to first base
into a hot dog vendor. What has happened
here?
This pursuit is all about having a clear mind and being able
to focus. I am going to need to somehow
learn the basics of transcendental meditation in the next few weeks to clear my
head. I don’t want to have to pack
myself into yoga pants and start chanting just to be able to note that ketchup
tastes differently than mustard. I don’t
know what else to do though. The New Age
music alone is worth steering clear of the entire yoga/TM/crystal power
scene. Yet, I am completely boxed
in. I will try anything. I am wandering alone out in the wilderness, a
man that was fallen from great heights to being a punchline in the heavily
oaked rooms of the WSET Fortified Wine Testing Unit. A place where men named Roger button up their
vests and make dry remarks about others along the lines of “Well, that student’s
test was a bit of a disaster, but it was no Miller.” Sly smiles cross everyone’s faces as they
toast each other with generous pours of sercial madeira. As the madeira hits their palate they will
chuckle quietly at Roger’s quip. Those
sons of bitches. I will show them. I wonder if I can use the same mantra as
George Harrison? He seemed pretty zen
and shit…
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