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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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Had the group over last night for a dinner tasting that was centred
around two pairs of wines tasted blind. We started with some thyme gougeres and duck breast and foie gras with a couple of bottles of a Loire bubble: Ch. de Mosny Montlouis sur Loire – the older version of this NV wine was maybe 4 years old. The nose picked up a tad in complexity but the wine lost in freshness. The current version seemed to have some residual sugar (not a lot) better fruit on palate and was the more pleasant wine. Moral – not worth aging in the hopes of development. The next course was made with about the last chanterelles available here. Simmered for about an hour and a half in a couple of litres of cream and then topped off with some sage and dry sherry, the dish is rich but has been proven to work with both young and old wines. 1979 Sassicaia – I have always liked this wine a lot, but had figured that it was now in decline, so I opened shortly before serving it, just in case it tanked too quickly. There was a slight mintiness in the nose, and some VA at the outset but that seemed to abate fairly quickly. The wine was understated to begin with but seemed to pick up steam with air in the glass, adding some cedar to the fruit nose and seeming to fill out a bit (it was initially a tad lean on palate). There was still some soft tannin and good acidity levels. No one guessed that it was Italian right off, and they had to work their way in to the property once that was revealed. This surprised me and showed better than the last time I’d opened it. One more bottle in the cellar to go. If you’ve got this, I wouldn’t wait (my cellar is very good and others may age faster), but it showed a surprising amount of charm over maybe an hour in the glass. 1982 Sassicaia – my last bottle of this, I think. It has always shown well and this was no exception. Darker colour, more interesting dark fruit based nose with some vanilla, very good balance, a tasty wine with excellent length. Not a big rush on this, although it won’t get any better with further age. The next course was a long simmered lamb, onion and apricot stew with tons of spice and heat that only abated after a couple of hours cooking, served alongside a kabocha squash puree with lots of ginger and cream. 1994 Umani Ronchi Pelago – I went back to Italy for the second pair as well. This wine was first created in this vintage in Mrache as an IGT that was 50% cabernet, 40% montepulciano and 10% merlot. Modern deep blue label and snazzy logos aside, this bottle showed very well indeed, with quite a dark colour, a nice dark chocolate hint in the otherwise cassis and blueberry nose. There was still a fair bit of soft tannin, and good length. The nose developed over time, adding wet stone and an herbal/floral element after awhile. I liked this one a lot. 1995 Umani Ronchi Pelago – a very different wine was hidings out in this bottle. The nose was a bit musty, and lacked the blueberry and the chocolate. The middle was similar in weight but considerably riper and that wasn’t an improvement as it failed to show the exemplary balance of the 94. the finish was shorter and I thought there was a bit of raisin at the end. Not a bad wine, but not one that could show well against the 1994. I staged a cheese-off – a comparative tasting of Stilton (pasteurized as is now standard) and Stitchelton, a rogue product made the old way as an unpasteurized cheese, but not able to be called Stilton because of that. The unanimous verdict was in favour of the Stichelton. While the Stilton was more blue and a heavier smell and more veining, the Stitchelton was creamier and more subtle with nutty almost sweetness at the end. Worked with pear and walnuts. 1987 Cockburn’s Quinta do Tua – In vintages not generally declared, the single quinta wines are often vinified and bottled alone, without blending. Cockburns has Tua and Canais (and two others I’ve never seen as single quinta bottlings), and you don’t often see them as they never seem to get wide marketing exposure. I bought this on release after an initial tasting that impressed me, and this was the first bottle I’ve opened – I haven’t seen much in the way of notes on this one, so took a chance. Cocoa and red fruit in the slightly hot nose, and cocoa in the mouth, also a bit of heat there, but very smooth, quite long in the finish. Hard to believe the vintage as this presents like a very decent Port of a normal declared vintage. I’d say this was still on the way up. Good showing. Opened and decanted about 5 hours ahead. |
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