Okay, time to add my 2-cents here as well. Note-taking was rather a pointless (pun intended) exercise with so many worthies. So just some thoughts and impressions. I missed some important wines, so that being taken into consideration, ...
my WOTN was the
1947 Huet Le Haut Lieu Moelleux the amber color here did not hide the beauty of this wine, that came alive with marzipan, orange water flavored with a light honey wash. Honeycomb (the kind including the wax), a 1920's frame-house attic, autumn-fallen apples. Absolutely lovely...dare I say, ethereal?
Nothing to me really came close to this, but there were some standouts that seemed to keep getting 'out-standed' as one bottle after another was pulled from it's resting place. I really enjoyed the
Gruauad Larose 1986. Nearly all the wines I purchased from that vintage when I was just bitten by the wine bug became hard, tight masses of tannins. This almost felt like it could have been an '89 to me: youthful, fruity nose...voluptuous, something I seldom say of any 1986 Bordeaux.
The
Chateau Rayas Chateauneuf-du-Pape 2000 had a most wonderful nose, perfumey in the way that some northern Italians can be, and while to me it didn't scream CdP, was a very complete wine, elegant, loamy, and full of spring flowers, befitting the fine spring day we had.
It's stablemate, the
Chateau le Fonsallete, Cotes-du-Rhone blanc 2000 was delicious, with an almost muscat-type aroma. Rich, but medium bodies in the mouth. I enjoyed it, being the sucker for white Rhones that I am.
The
Brovia Barolo Rocche 1998 was in a good place. Despite a color that looked advanced it performed to it's pedigree, and in the palate still showed young with grippy tannins, but having the floral orange-rind quality it should.
Chateau Musar 1998 blanc also was an interesting wine, like a Tondonia blanc. An orange-wine before there was a word for it.
I liked the
Burgess 1978 better than Dale did, finding it a fine example of cabernet before it became Californicated. Slightly balsamic, with some slight euculyptus-seed, this had only a whisper of a nose on it, but I quite enjoyed it.
Oh yes, how can one forget a 22-year old Bandol?? The
Chateau Pradeaux 1989 was an amazing wine that really required meat to go with it, preferable spit-roasted something. The color looked a full 10 years younger than its age. This is still a baby, full of black cherry -licorice goodness.
Montelena Cabernet Sauvignon Sonoma County 1973. Eh? Not much to say here. This almost tasted like an old zin to me.
Hargrave Chardonnay North Fork of Long Island, 1996 reserve "Ittt's A-L-I-V-E! Really. Or, as Monty Python would have said, "I'm not dead yet." 11.9% alcohol, how quaint.
Chateau Lynch Bages, 1985 Came across better aromatically than on the palate. That lovely blackcurrant nose brought me back to the first wine I ever bought 3 bottles of. Unfortunately fading.
Henri Bonneau, Chat-du-Pape, cuvee Marie Beurrier, 1995 I never heard of this cuvee before, but I liked it enough to write it down. Cherry-pie spice, very smooth, showing well.
Cos d'Estournel 1982 was opened way too late for me to enjoy properly, but was an excellent wine. A beautiful wine that I wish I coulf have enjoyed with a meal, instead of merely sampling.
Geantet-Pansiot Chambolle Musigny 1995 How can anyone not like Musigny? Yeah, it was sweet, but not cloying. Another wine I would love to have at dinner.
Oh yes, that Champagne was r-real nice too
All in all, a great time: the people, the food, the host...everything, just perfect.