I honestly don’t understand where you are coming from with this concern over acidulation.... are you sure it’s the culprit for everything going wrong in a wine...?

Since I find this subject utterly fascinating, I thought it deserved a thread of its own, with the hope of attracting comments and information from forum members. Thanks, Alejandro, for prodding me to organize my thoughts, rightly or wrongly, on the subject.
First, the background, as I understand it (please correct me wherever I am wrong). We all know that the unusually hot 2003 vintage in Bordeaux (and elsewhere in Europe) produced many wines high in alcohol and low in acidity. To some degree, this happens every year in Mendoza, where wine is grown on irrigated deserts with hot sunshine, an effect that is relatively stable and predictable. The Andean heat, if you want it to and allow it to, will ripen grapes to the point where they generate wines with high alcohol and low acidity. Picking the grapes earlier would help the wine’s acid/fruit balance, but with consequences deemed undesirable by contemporary market trends. More on this later.
A knowledgeable acquaintance tells me that “Traditionally, there was a point called the ‘industrial’ level at which winemakers considered a grape to be ripe. Essentially, this was the point at which there was equilibrium between the level of sugar and the amount of acidity, and was used to establish the date on which the grapes should be picked. But, then, new studies showed that grapes picked at the industrial level did not have sufficient phenolic maturity (tannins and color) and aromas, resulting in wines that were deficient in this respect. A move towards picking riper grapes emerged, and is now prevalent in almost all wine regions. One of the technical reasons for Michel Rolland’s fame is precisely this: over 30 years ago, he began to pick over ripe grapes in Bordeaux in order to produce 'better' wine. In the preface to the Larousse wine guide, Michel Rolland describes how he noticed that wines tasted better in dryer years because, in these years, growers did not rush to pick as soon as industrial maturity occurred, letting grapes hang a little while longer. The sun in Argentina, and parts of Australia, Portugal, Spain, and Italy, is such that over ripe grapes have much more sugar (14 - 15% potential alcohol) and lose much more acidity (sunshine reduces malic acidity). Wines in regions such as Alsace and Germany are, also, almost always made from very ripe grapes, but the climate is colder, so wines become less alcoholic and retain their characteristic natural acidity.”
If you're a winemaker and want to make an "international style" wine, there are many techniques for doing so AFTER the grapes are picked: microxigenation, concentrators, yeasts, enzymes, tannin additives, new oak with different toast levels, acidulation, over-extraction, heated maceration, dialysis, reverse osmosis... But practically the only technique available BEFORE picking is over-ripening. But this can be risky in Bordeaux and Burgundy, exposing the crops to hail, rain and rot, so these places, it stands to reason, would favor techniques applied after picking. In contrast, there is little risk in picking grapes at full phenolic ripeness in places with relatively stable and predictable climates, like Mendoza. As a result, in most vintages, the vast majority of Argentinean wines need to be acidulated (the addition of a certain amount of tartaric acid, an amount that has to take into account that malolactic fermentation reduces the overall level of acidity when it converts malic acid into lactic acid). Only in the very highest vineyards is the cold such that a measure of acidity remains, one of the reasons why there is a positive correlation in Mendoza between wine quality and vineyard altitude. In his piece “Argentinean Wines: An Emerging Force,” Jay Miller quotes winemaker Paul Hobbs as saying that 2006 was the first vintage “in which he did not have to acidify (acidulation is almost universally done here).” Perhaps this was a mistake: the 2006 Viña Cobos Benteveo Chardonnay that I posted on last week was full of gorgeous fruit, but completely flaccid from lack of acidity. But I digress, perhaps.
So, many observers agree that, today, grapes are picked when overly mature, with the objective of producing smoother, earlier drinking wines. The problem is when, to achieve this smoothness, you gain alcohol and lose acidity and aromatic freshness. These “big” wines, full of fruit jam, are now found everywhere (many, of course, are wonderful). Nicolas Joly recently told an interviewer: “Did you know that research has made available, to winemakers, yeasts that generate specific characteristics? Everyone who makes wine knows that if you use BDX in a cabernet you will get intense aromas of red fruit jam and a stronger tannic structure. On the other hand, if you use GRE, you will be favoring aromatic freshness and red fruit flavors. D21 will inhibit herbaceous aromas, and so on… You make exactly the wine you want and not the wine that the soil gives you. So, it is not surprising that all wines now taste the same.”
Young wines can give immense amounts of pleasure, but many believe that only slow maturation brings about the most exquisite pleasures to be had from wine. Will these fruit bombs last? Possibly, but I would wager that there is a Faustian pact at work here, forfeiting a longer future in exchange for a shooting star present. My problem is not so much with acidulation per se. Unlike some other techniques in the toolbox, it seems to be a necessary evil, and was sorely missed in the Benteveo mentioned above. My problem (to the extent I have one) is with the cause of acidulation, the thing to which acidulation points: the picking of over ripe grapes, which elevates alcohol levels, mitigates varietal differences, and reduces the role of terroir. While Chile holds a commanding lead over Argentina in terms of making wines without character for the export market, over the last few years, possibly as a result of the immense domestic difficulties in Argentina, more and more Argentinean producers seem intent, wittingly or unwittingly, on emulating the Chilean export model with wines made from over ripe grapes. I am a big fan of the idea of idiosyncratic Argentinean wine (and Argentina in general), and will continue to try all producers in the search for those with (what I call) character. They don’t have to be small – Laura Catena’s Luca Pinot Noir has lots of it. While there is definitely a place for competent wine made by mass producers like Terrazas, from my personal point of view, life’s simply too short. Despite the growth of the international style, there remains enough wine with personality from all over the world that I am dying to taste.