JoePerry wrote:Alan, I think great wine needs no excuses.
You're right. But I couldn't disagree with you more greatly regarding your comments on young wine. Young wines don't necessarily "taste good", nor should they be required to. Wines are a living breathing thing and particularly when young go through vast changes from month to month, from week to week, sometimes from day or hour to hour. It's why tasting a young wine once and then giving it a rating may be the most useless way for a consumer to get advice.
If you tastes a young wine once it has fruit and little structure, once and it has tannin and no fruit, once with acidity and no fruit, it might not be a particularly pleasant experience on any of the occassions, but would be an outstaning choice for a wine to buy.
So essentially we go back to my original point. I'm not trying to make excuses for it, I just think that if you have no idea what to look for, there's no point in bashing a 2000 Vaillons from Raveneau, when it will taste absolutely nothing like it does now anyways.
Not too mention, as I have tried to explain thousands of times, Chablis is in its very initial stage fairly expressive and then later shuts completely down. It then opens back up a few years later. Many of the 2000's are currently in this stage. Not making excuses, don't have too. Since I have tasted the wine in the barrel and the bottle over the course of time, I alredy know what's there.