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DaleW DaleW is offline
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Default 1997 Luigi Einaudi Barolo

On Jan 28, 12:59*pm, "Bi!!" > wrote:
> On Jan 28, 10:36 am, DaleW > wrote:
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> > On Jan 28, 6:53 am, "Bi!!" > wrote:

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> > > On Jan 27, 3:21 pm, DaleW > wrote:

>
> > > > On Jan 27, 9:50 am, "Bi!!" > wrote:

>
> > > > > 1997 Luigi Einaudi Barolo. I've posted notes on this before but it's
> > > > > been a while. I still have a few left from a case purchased on
> > > > > release. I opened last night with grilled veal chops and creamy
> > > > > polenta with white truffle butter. Dark red in the glass with just a
> > > > > faint hint of brick (I think many Barolos are normally a bit brickish
> > > > > in color) Typical Barolo nose of roses, tar, a bit of black tea and
> > > > > ripe black plums. Fairly ripe on the palate showing dense black
> > > > > cherry, plums, a bit of espresso and leather. Interesting sweet ripe
> > > > > fruit notes at the front with a fairly high toned acidity on the
> > > > > finish and fairly aggressive tannins. The wine could still use a few
> > > > > more years. "B+"

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> > > > this is the normale? I drank my last bottle I think last year, thought
> > > > it reasonably mature with mostly resolved tannins. Bottle variation,
> > > > or maybe storage (I have good passive storage, but maybe tad warmer in
> > > > summer than ideal).

>
> > > I bought it directly from the distributor on release. My cellar is a
> > > constant 55F (measured with a bottle probe not the air temp) with 70%
> > > humidity. I find that many of my wines are drinking "younger" than
> > > many of their counterparts from different cellars. Before building
> > > the cellar 15 years or so ago, I found that my basement was actually
> > > cooler in the summer than in the winter since I air-conditioned the
> > > house in the summer the cool air would sink to the lower level and
> > > keep the cellar quite cool yet in the winter the heat from the furnace
> > > would actually increase the temp in the basement storage area to
> > > higher than the 62F that it was in the summer.

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> > my range is basically 50-65 F, with very slow changes. Small
> > reasonably efficient furnace is not next to cellar, but even right
> > next to furnace it doesn't warm much. I probably bought this at retail
> > a year or two after release, so that might be another possibility. In
> > general my wines seem to age fairly gracefully, and this was fine,
> > just sounded a touch more mature than yours. In general I don't think
> > 97s are real long term wines, though they've generally been tasty.- Hide quoted text -

>
> > - Show quoted text -

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> I don't thik the '97's are long term agers either but 20 years for
> Barolo isn't extraordinary. *I find it hard to judge by the color
> given tat to me Barolo is already a bit brickish. *The tannins in the
> "97 Einaudi were still firm although my recollection is that Einaudi
> is generally perceived as an "old style" producer.


I think Einaudi is mixed- I think the basic Barolo is pretty
traditional, while the Costa Grimaldi is pretty modern. Not sure re
the Cannubi, never tried, though I have a couple 04s.