FoodBanter.com

FoodBanter.com (https://www.foodbanter.com/)
-   Wine (https://www.foodbanter.com/wine/)
-   -   TN: Gamay, Merlot, Chardonnay, and Corvina (https://www.foodbanter.com/wine/421184-tn-gamay-merlot-chardonnay.html)

DaleW 17-11-2012 09:23 PM

TN: Gamay, Merlot, Chardonnay, and Corvina
 
Meatless Monday was a “use up what’s in kitchen” day, so I made a quick porcini/red wine/escarole risotto, panzanella, and green beans. Cooking wine was the 2005 Moueix “Encore” Merlot. Solid little Bordeaux, black plum fruit with just a note of green, easy tannins, quite decent for very little money.. B-

Dinner wine was the 2007 Masi “Costasera” Amarone Classico (375 ml). You know, I really like Amarone in half bottles. A glass or a bit more is plenty for me. Rich and full (duh!) with black plums and raisin fruit, moderate tannins, good acids. Nose is spicy (cardomon, aniseed) with a bit of heat.. B+/B

Tuesday was roast chicken and the 2010 Brun/Terres Dorees Morgon. Farily tannic, balanced acids, red fruit accented with coffee. Good length, good with the chicken. Maybe a bit tight. Betsy enjoyed rest on day 2. B/B+ (if I had more I’d hold)

Thursday we had an assortment of mostly leftovers (Betsy’s spaghetti and meatballs from Wed, my doggie-bagged pork chop from Il Corso, plus escarole and asparagus) with the 2011 Edmunds St. Jone “Bone Jolly” Gamay rose.. Fun puppydog of a wine, easy and pleasing. B+

Friday was Bittman’s one hour bouillabaisse with the 2007 Etienne Sauzet Chassagne-Montrachet. OK, so white Burgundy isn’t a traditional match for the dish, but it’s what I was feeling like opening. And really, dish doesn’t complement. But I really enjoy the Chassagne after dinner- full with hazelnut and lemon notes,just a whisper of oak, good acids. The only thing detracting for me is a faint hint of oxidation- this is surprisingly mature. Please, not the pox. But if I don’t extrapolate, B+/A-.


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.

Bi!! 19-11-2012 04:08 PM

TN: Gamay, Merlot, Chardonnay, and Corvina
 
On Nov 17, 4:23*pm, DaleW > wrote:
> Meatless Monday was a “use up what’s in kitchen” day, so I made a quick porcini/red wine/escarole risotto, panzanella, and green beans. Cooking wine was the 2005 Moueix “Encore” Merlot. Solid little Bordeaux, black plum fruit with just a note of green, easy tannins, quite decent for very little money.. B-
>
> Dinner wine was the 2007 Masi “Costasera” Amarone Classico (375 ml). You know, I really like Amarone in half bottles. A glass or a bit more is plenty for me. Rich and full (duh!) with black plums and raisin fruit, moderate tannins, good acids. Nose is spicy (cardomon, aniseed) with a bit of heat. B+/B
>
> Tuesday was roast chicken and the 2010 Brun/Terres Dorees Morgon. Farily tannic, balanced acids, red fruit accented with coffee. Good length, good with the chicken. Maybe a bit tight. Betsy enjoyed rest on day 2. B/B+ (if I had more I’d hold)
>
> Thursday we had an assortment of mostly leftovers (Betsy’s spaghetti and meatballs from Wed, my doggie-bagged pork chop from Il Corso, plus escarole and *asparagus) with the 2011 Edmunds St. Jone “Bone Jolly” Gamay rose. Fun puppydog of a wine, easy and pleasing. B+
>
> Friday was Bittman’s one hour bouillabaisse with the 2007 Etienne Sauzet Chassagne-Montrachet. OK, so white Burgundy isn’t a traditional match for the dish, but it’s what I was feeling like opening. And really, dish doesn’t complement. But I really enjoy the Chassagne after dinner- full with hazelnut and lemon notes,just a whisper of oak, good acids. The only thing detracting for me is a faint hint of oxidation- this is surprisingly mature. Please, not the pox. But if I don’t extrapolate, *B+/A-.
>
> 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.


Glad somebody finally said it about Amarone. :-)

Graham 20-11-2012 03:59 AM

TN: Gamay, Merlot, Chardonnay, and Corvina
 

"Bi!!" > wrote in message
...
On Nov 17, 4:23 pm, DaleW > wrote:
> Meatless Monday was a “use up what’s in kitchen” day, so I made a quick
> porcini/red wine/escarole risotto, panzanella, and green beans. Cooking
> wine was the 2005 Moueix “Encore” Merlot. Solid little Bordeaux, black
> plum fruit with just a note of green, easy tannins, quite decent for very
> little money.. B-
>
> Dinner wine was the 2007 Masi “Costasera” Amarone Classico (375 ml). You
> know, I really like Amarone in half bottles. A glass or a bit more is
> plenty for me. Rich and full (duh!) with black plums and raisin fruit,
> moderate tannins, good acids. Nose is spicy (cardomon, aniseed) with a bit
> of heat. B+/B
>
> Tuesday was roast chicken and the 2010 Brun/Terres Dorees Morgon. Farily
> tannic, balanced acids, red fruit accented with coffee. Good length, good
> with the chicken. Maybe a bit tight. Betsy enjoyed rest on day 2. B/B+ (if
> I had more I’d hold)
>
> Thursday we had an assortment of mostly leftovers (Betsy’s spaghetti and
> meatballs from Wed, my doggie-bagged pork chop from Il Corso, plus
> escarole and asparagus) with the 2011 Edmunds St. Jone “Bone Jolly” Gamay
> rose. Fun puppydog of a wine, easy and pleasing. B+
>
> Friday was Bittman’s one hour bouillabaisse with the 2007 Etienne Sauzet
> Chassagne-Montrachet. OK, so white Burgundy isn’t a traditional match for
> the dish, but it’s what I was feeling like opening. And really, dish doesn’t
> complement. But I really enjoy the Chassagne after dinner- full with
> hazelnut and lemon notes,just a whisper of oak, good acids. The only thing
> detracting for me is a faint hint of oxidation- this is surprisingly
> mature. Please, not the pox. But if I don’t extrapolate, B+/A-.
>
> 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.


Glad somebody finally said it about Amarone. :-)
----------------------------------------
I always think it as liquid mince pies.
Graham




All times are GMT +1. The time now is 10:22 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
FoodBanter