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Dale Williams
 
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Default TN: nice wife, not so nice Pomerol

Wednesday was our third anniversary, and we had plans to try out to a local
restaurant. I thought my plans had hit an iceberg when a volunteer tanked on
me, but another friend came through to ensure I could enjoy dinner with Betsy
rather than head to the city. Between the Yankees game and the debate, the cute
restaurant was half-filled so we could have a quiet dinner. Excellent pumpkin
soup, decent pate, good lamb. Only Betsy's duck was truly lacking- how can one
make bland roast duck (I think they literally didn't season at all)? Wine list
features rather high markups, several wines I owned were 3X or more what I
paid. But I spotted a $68 1998 Pomerol - not a wine I knew, but not a bad price
for a Pomerol from a strong vintage. I ordered, warning Betsy it was likely to
be closed at first. I was half-convinced from other markups they would bring
out a Lalande de Pomerol, but this was indeed a Pomerol- the 1998 Ch.
Beausčjour De Bonalgue.

So the question is, how does one make a dilute Pomerol in a year like 1998?
Modest red plum fruit, light tannins, weak midpalate, short finish. Over a 90
minute period it filled out slightly, a hint of spice and leather and with a
raspberry tartness to the fruit that was more appealing. By the end it would
have been a convincing 1999 Lalande de Pomerol that I would have thought an
average deal if it had been $35 on a list. It goes to show one the dangers of a
Bordeaux one has never heard of. By the end this was a B- on my easy scale.

The wine wasn't too exciting, but my dining companion was. A good night,
despite the wine.

Grade disclaimer: I'm a very easy grader, basically A is an excellent wine, B a
good wine, C mediocre. Anything below C means I wouldn't drink at a party where
it was only choice. Furthermore, I offer no promises of objectivity, accuracy,
and certainly not of consistency
Dale

Dale Williams
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