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.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1 (permalink)   Report Post  
Posted to alt.food.wine
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 463
Default Friday Lunch Notes for May 2009

Notes from my monthy tasting lunch.

1999 Pol Roger Rose – a long time member of our group had passed on
this week and so there was much conversation reminiscing about him,
and this wine was specifically brought to toast the departed. The wine
was a soft apricot colour (thus preserving the reputation of the
person who bought it as never having brought a white wine). Excellent
fine mousse was a good sign of a French wine even before I tasted it,
when I found a yeastiness in the mouth, the wine seemingly quite soft,
and yet finishing with a good shot of refreshing acidity. Nice
toastiness in the nose, too.

2002 Ch. de Chorey Pernand Vergelesses Les Combottes – creamy oaky
nose, showing some colour and lacking acidity, finishing with just a
barely perceptible hint of oxidation. Pleasant wine but would have
been better with a bit more acidity t alleviate the near flabbiness in
the middle.

2005 Ambullneo Vineyard Chardonnay ‘Big Paw’ (Santa Maria) – new one
on me (and of course on the spell checker which gamely suggested
‘abalone might be what I really wanted). Nice sweet fruit nose, and
the fruit became apparent as peach in the mouth, right near the end of
a nice long middle. Despite an oily mouth feel, the wine had a long
clean finish, and some interesting petrolly notes were found in the
nose, making ones thought head for something with a bit of Reisling.
Glad to make the acquaintance of this one.

2003 Niellon Chassagne Montrachet Les Chaumees – clean lemon nose with
a wet stone thing going, rich and smooth on palate, with good length,
but it was a bit soft and a bit warm in the nose.

At this point we (finally, one taster was heard to say) switched over
to red wine.

1987 Lake’s Folly Cabernet – this was ithout doubt the best ringer I
have ever tasted from Oz – no way to pick this out as anything but a
well made cabernet and then start wondering if it was a Bordeaux, or….
The colour heralded maturity, the nose called out to France, and the
wine was sweet, smooth and long. Yum.

I was up next and had opted to bring a pair of wines to see if the
crew could make out what they were. They had a lot of commonality –
same vintage, encepagement (a typical Bordeaux blend of cab, cab
franc, merlot and Malbec), region, winemaker - pretty much everything
except winery. They we

1985 Arrowood Sonoma Cabernet Sauvignon – sourced also 90% from the
Alexander Valley, this wine was the very first made by Dick Arrowood
under his new winery name, when he was starting up the winery (it
opened its doors a couple of years later) but when he was still
winemaker at St. Jean. I visited both when I was down racing cars the
year they released both wines and as I knew him from St. Jean, picked
up a few bottles of his inaugural vintage as an independent. The wines
showed startlingly different. While both wines showed excellent
colour, the nose on this one was very ripe and leathery, although the
wine was fairly well balanced on palate with some remaining tannins
and some fairly intense flavours. I found it a bit tiring to the
palate compared to the next wine, but nonetheless enjoyed it.

1985 Ch. St. Jean Alexander Valley Cabernet Sauvignon – I used to stop
in at the winery on the way home from Laguna Seca and see what the
latest great Chad or Riesling was (I still have a couple of splits of
the astounding 1978 Robert Young TBA, now almost an impenetrable brown
in colour, yet unoxidized and delicious). In those days they
showcased their whites and hardly even admitted that they made any red
wine – I don’t know if they sold anywhere else but the winery in those
days, but if they did, the reds never made it far from home. The
wines were huge monsters when tasted young and I laid a few away as an
experiment. This wine had a more muted almost French nose, good
stuffing, still significant tannins and a lengthy sweet finish. I
preferred this one, but enjoyed both.

1970 Clos Rene – I forgive you if the name of this Pomerol didn’t
immediately mean something to you, I have only ever tasted a couple,
and a long time ago. Sweet nose with elements of iron and mineral,
typical mature Bordeaux pale colour, still enough fruit to carry it
off and a juicy acidity that brightened it . Always interesting to see
what you get with these older wines.

2000 Dom. du Pegau Cuvee Reservee – chosen in remembrance of the
departed, rather than with any thought of the wine being anywhere near
ready. Killer CNduP with a pepper and cough syrup nose, still too
astringent and tannic to really show at best, but something to watch
over the years. I won’t be opening any of my pathetically small stash
any time soon.

2000 Quinta do Vallado Reserva – this wine from the Douro was a nice
surprise. It was still young and almost purple, big body and powerful
dark presence in the mouth, yet friendly and drinkable. Very nice,
and classy.

1990 Quinta do Vesuvio – I think this may be the first vintage made of
this Port. The colour was actually fairly pale, with a hot nse, and
the wine drinks very well now. belying predictions on release that it
would need a lot of time (19 years isn’t a lot of time as these things
go). Medium sweet, nice long finish.

2003 Ch. Lafaurie Peyraguey – wow! Fair bit of colour considering its
youth, a lemons and almonds sort of nose, and very sweet in the mouth
with a very long finish. Great as dessert!
Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
November 2009 Lunch Notes Bill S. Wine 0 07-11-2009 03:31 PM
Lunch Notes Sept. 2009 Bill S. Wine 1 12-09-2009 05:04 PM
Monthly Lunch Notes June 2009 Bill S. Wine 2 13-06-2009 10:31 PM
Lunch Notes Bill S. Wine 1 07-03-2009 07:49 PM
Brunch toady: Friday 31rd Jan 2009 Peter-Lucas[_8_] General Cooking 15 01-02-2009 02:26 AM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 03:08 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 FoodBanter.com.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about Food and drink"