by Bill Spohn » Thu Jan 01, 2009 11:06 am
We got together with friends for a lunch and cribbage game on new year’s eve.
Started out with:
2004 Champalou Vouvray Cuvee des Fondraux - a waxy honeysuckle and honey nose, and quite delightful in the mouth with apples and lively acidity and good length.
Then with local beef, done rare and sliced, served with pasta with an Oregon black truffle sliced over it, a couple of Chateauneufs we’d wanted to revisit:
1995 Ch. de Beaucastel - excellent nose without a hint of brett, based in dark fruit and mushroom and cassis. Classic. Still significant tannin on palate which became even a bit more prominent with time, and very good length. While pleasurable now, it needs time. It was interesting that when I tasted this, I saw no flaws that could compromise a long enjoyable life for the wine. Then we tasted the 98 and both said - Gee - the 95 seems short on fruit now! I don’t think it is, that’s just an impression given by tasting a new style with a traditional style.
1998 Ch. de Beaucastel - totally different nose on this one, and something I don’t recall seeing before on a Beaucastel - pronounced dark chocolate! There is also cassis underneath, that came to the fore as the cocoa slowly abated with airing, but at the beginning if you just nosed this and someone told you it was an American Merlot, you have been in full agreement. The nose picked up some black cherry as well and in the mouth the wine was smooth and supple - surprisingly so, with lower tannin than the 95. This is a pairing I’dlike to repeat in about 5 years to see what these wines are doing.
With cheese, an Italian wine:
1998 Maculan Acininobili - if it matters, this wine is made from 85% Vespaiola, 10% Tocai, and 5% Garganega in Veneto. It showed a lot of colour, about the same as a Malmsey Madeira, and the nose was a sort of rancio thing that was a bit surprising. Not too sweet on palate, it featured orange marmalade flavours and had excellent length. Fascinating wine.
In honor of the occasion, I chose to take my notes with a 1909 Waterman model 52 ½ black hard rubber fountain pen, still working beautifully after a century. Hope we can all say the same thing!
Coop’s cooking was great and he put up a heck of a fight at the crib board. A great way to spend a new year’s eve day!