Hi pianistimo,
Here's a constructive observation. I realize you've just started this piece, so it's still very new to you. But I've noticed this same quirk in several of your other recordings as well. It has to do with continuity (or lack thereof). Whenever you make an error (and we all drop some notes at times, including me), it seems to startle you into an abrupt halt, whereby you do a retake of the measure, phrase, figure, or oftentimes just a single wrong note--which would be fine in a practice session, where the conventional wisdom is to stop, analyze the cause of the error, correct it at once, and repeat the correction several times to change the "habit" of execution in that troublesome spot. In a live performance or a recording, however, you really have to totally ignore the error, gloss over it, or otherwise continue on your way (improvising if necessary) to ensure musical continuity. (The very same principle would hold for a memory slip as well.) Otherwise, the listener also becomes distracted and likewise enmeshed in the error and correction process too, which, I would have to believe, you as performer would want to avoid. My advice is, no matter what, keep on going!
You might feel entirely different about this, and I do understand and respect that, but I just wanted to share my thoughts on it, as you do it fairly frequently.