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Wine (alt.food.wine) Devoted to the discussion of wine and wine-related topics. A place to read and comment about wines, wine and food matching, storage systems, wine paraphernalia, etc. In general, any topic related to wine is valid fodder for the group. |
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TN: Issan, Bouchard, Huet
Friday Betsy made turkey stuffed with goat cheese and spinach, but
left for dress of Pirates of Penzance before I got home. I had leftover whites (Bourgogne and Riesling) with dinner, but felt like a red afterwards. I opened the 2004 Ch. d'Issan (Margaux), my first 2004 Bordeaux. Nose of berries and flowers, good ripe blackcurrant and black cherry fruit. With time some elements of spice and cedar. Tannins are ripe and well-integrated, acidity is enough to keep it lively. Tasted again tonight, the fruit has a light licorice edge, and a bit of smoke, nice balanced wine. The downside of this wine is that it is a bit short to qualify as top-notch Bordeaux, but I think this will be a welcome companion at the dinner table for the short to mid term. B+ Tonight we had an early dinner before she headed to city. Pierre Franey's basil/pinenut stuffed scallops, mushroom rice, and brocolli- rabe/pea dish. I went with the 2002 Bouchard "Le Clous" Meursault. Good for village level, a bit fat but not flabby, toast and butterscotch over Bosc pear fruit. Maybe a little thin in the middle, but ok for mid-$20s. B Over 4 nights the 2002 Huet Le Haut Lieu Vouvray (from 375) showed fairly well. Some oxidative notes, but strangely never got worse. Baked apple Betty with honied apricot notes, lively acidity, long finish. B+ 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. |
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TN: Issan, Bouchard, Huet
On Mar 3, 9:08�pm, "DaleW" > wrote:
> Friday Betsy made turkey stuffed with goat cheese and spinach, but > left for dress of Pirates of Penzance before I got home. I had > leftover whites (Bourgogne and Riesling) with dinner, but felt like a > red afterwards. I opened the 2004 Ch. d'Issan (Margaux), my first 2004 > Bordeaux. Nose of berries and flowers, good ripe blackcurrant and > black cherry fruit. With time some elements of spice and cedar. > Tannins are ripe and well-integrated, acidity is enough to keep it > lively. *Tasted again tonight, the fruit has a light licorice edge, > and a bit of smoke, nice balanced wine. The downside of this wine is > that it is a bit short to qualify as top-notch Bordeaux, but I think > this will be a welcome companion at the dinner table for the short to > mid term. B+ > > Tonight we had an early dinner before she headed to city. Pierre > Franey's basil/pinenut stuffed scallops, mushroom rice, and *brocolli- > rabe/pea dish. I went with the 2002 Bouchard "Le Clous" Meursault. > Good for village level, a bit fat but not flabby, toast and > butterscotch over Bosc pear fruit. Maybe a little thin in the middle, > but ok for mid-$20s. B > > Over 4 nights the 2002 Huet Le Haut Lieu Vouvray (from 375) showed > fairly well. Some oxidative notes, but strangely never got worse. > Baked apple Betty with honied apricot notes, lively acidity, long > finish. B+ > > 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. oops, it was pointed out elsewhere I didn't specify the sweetness of the Huet- it was the demisec |
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TN: Issan, Bouchard, Huet
DaleW wrote:
>>Over 4 nights the 2002 Huet Le Haut Lieu Vouvray (from 375) showed >>fairly well. Some oxidative notes, but strangely never got worse. >>Baked apple Betty with honied apricot notes, lively acidity, long >>finish. B+ > oops, it was pointed out elsewhere I didn't specify the sweetness of > the Huet- it was the demisec > Thanks for the note on the LHL demi, Dale. I have a 750 of it, along with one of the CdB demisec. My inclination is to hold off on both for another 5 years or so. How's that sound to you? Mark Lipton |
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TN: Issan, Bouchard, Huet
On Mar 4, 3:06�pm, Mark Lipton > wrote:
> DaleW wrote: > >>Over 4 nights the 2002 Huet Le Haut Lieu Vouvray (from 375) showed > >>fairly well. Some oxidative notes, but strangely never got worse. > >>Baked apple Betty with honied apricot notes, lively acidity, long > >>finish. B+ > > oops, it was pointed out elsewhere I didn't specify the sweetness of > > the Huet- it was the demisec > > Thanks for the note on the LHL demi, Dale. *I have a 750 of it, along > with one of the CdB demisec. *My inclination is to hold off on both for > another 5 years or so. *How's that sound to you? > > Mark Lipton Your guess is as good as mine. Lots of Huet demisecs drink well at 30+ years! Certainly now is pretty much infanticide, but I'd check current notes in 5 years to see what folks are reporting, these can get in funky stages. |
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