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  
Bill Spohn
 
Posts: n/a
Default April Lunch Notes

April lunch notes:

With truffled foie gras pate wrapped in smoked salmon and cabbage leaf:

2001 Ch. Tertre Grand Mayne (Entre deux Mers) - killer little value, this. From
30 year old vines, mostly Sauvignon blanc, some Semillon and Muscadelle.
Showing some colour and a lot of character in the mouth, clean and with decent
length. Marked down to $9.95!

1983 Jaboulet Dom. Thalabert Crozes Hermitage - garnet colour with bricky
edges, the only give away in the nose to the Northern Rhone was the slight bit
of pepper. It still has tannin, and lots of acidity but it is balanced and
pleasant, and having lasted this long, I don't expect it to take any sudden
decline - it should last for a few more years. Nice to have a mature Syrah!

1997 Dom. Remizieres Cuve Christophe Crozes Hermitage - as these events are
completely blind, it is amazing sometimes when two similar wines show up. This
was of course very young and purple with pale edges. The nose didn't have a lot
of pepper and was more prunish and vanilla. Quite soft in terms of tannin but
lots of acidity, this is starting to drink well now and I'd be very surprised
to see it last as long as the Thalabert.

With marinated Saltspring lamb :

1997 Ch. St. Cosme Gigondas - nice segue from North to South while staying with
the same vintage. Darker wine with mineral nose (less sweetness than last time
I had it). In the mouth there are very slightly astringent tannins but the
underlying fruit is sound. I have a couple of cases of this somewhere - it may
be time to find it and start monitoring by tasting a bottle every 6 months or
so.

1998 Vieux Donjon - dark with a weighty Rhone nose of anise, leather and wood
smoke. This wine has not yet really melded together and while it has lots of
stuffing, a few more years should smooth things out nicely.

With duck confit:

1988 Ch. Beychevelle - I figured this for a 1989 for sure, or even possibly a
1990 but no way would I have chosen a 1988. Big oak nose, lovely and sweet in
the mouth, and long. Best bottle of this I've had!

1993 Tenuta Farnese Bongoverno - a mediocre vintage in most of Italy, but this
internationally styled wine stands out as a winner. Dark with slightly bricky
edges, and a nose of mint and mocha nose, it had bright fruit and good length.
Very hard to nail this as Italian, blind.

With cheese:

1997 Heitz Napa Cabernet - Dark with a rich minty fruit nose, sweet entry, soft
tannins and good balance. This wine will last a long time, but is excellent
drinking now.

1990 Kenwood Artist's Label Cabernet - big dark minty wine. The tannins have
finally softened (when I tasted it at the winery, they were pretty darned
hard!), and the fruit was out in spades. Oddly, given the early history, I
think this wine is probably at peak right now and won't get any better, though
it will last for years.


  #2 (permalink)   Report Post  
Tom S
 
Posts: n/a
Default April Lunch Notes


"Bill Spohn" > wrote in message
...
> April lunch notes:


As always, interesting tasting notes, Bill. You certainly know how to eat
and drink well!

Tom S


  #3 (permalink)   Report Post  
Bill Spohn
 
Posts: n/a
Default April Lunch Notes

>As always, interesting tasting notes, Bill. You certainly know how to eat
>and drink well!


Yeah - too well!

Time to get in (better) shape for summer!

Hard to stop drinking and eating well, though.
  #4 (permalink)   Report Post  
Mark Lipton
 
Posts: n/a
Default April Lunch Notes

Bill Spohn wrote:


> 1983 Jaboulet Dom. Thalabert Crozes Hermitage - garnet colour with bricky
> edges, the only give away in the nose to the Northern Rhone was the slight bit
> of pepper. It still has tannin, and lots of acidity but it is balanced and
> pleasant, and having lasted this long, I don't expect it to take any sudden
> decline - it should last for a few more years. Nice to have a mature Syrah!


Wow! A 21 year old Crozes. Whoda thunkit? That tells me all I need to
know about what Thalabert used to be able to achieve.


> 1998 Vieux Donjon - dark with a weighty Rhone nose of anise, leather and wood
> smoke. This wine has not yet really melded together and while it has lots of
> stuffing, a few more years should smooth things out nicely.


Thanks for the notes on this wine, Bill. Thanks to the laudatory WS
rating, I never managed to procure any. Can you compare it to any other
'98s that you've had recently?

Mark Lipton
  #5 (permalink)   Report Post  
Bill Spohn
 
Posts: n/a
Default April Lunch Notes

>
>Thanks for the notes on this wine, Bill. Thanks to the laudatory WS
>rating, I never managed to procure any. Can you compare it to any other
>'98s that you've had recently?
>


With the possible exception of Chante Perdrix, which seems to be drinking
early, all of the 98s I have tried will benefit from at least several more
years in bottle.

That's not to say that they aren't delightful now - a Les Cailloux I had
recently was very nice.

It's just that patience is rewarded if you like a mature wine, but heck, there
are people out there (many of them French) drinking the current release of
Beaucastel as soon as they can get it home - whatever floats your boat.

And the Donjon was a positive bargain compared to the (also excellent)
Telegraphe.......
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
More Lunch Notes Bill S. Wine 0 20-06-2012 03:34 AM
Lunch Notes Bill S. Wine 0 06-08-2011 04:27 PM
Lunch Notes April 2011 Bill S. Wine 0 09-04-2011 07:50 PM
April Lunch Notes Bill S. Wine 0 03-04-2010 12:35 AM
April Lunch Notes Bill S. Wine 0 11-04-2009 03:51 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 05:53 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2025 FoodBanter.com.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about Food and drink"