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WTN: Speak, Memory

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Mark Lipton

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WTN: Speak, Memory

by Mark Lipton » Mon Aug 07, 2006 11:35 pm

Opened tonight with a dinner of roast lamb rib chops:

1998 Caymus Estate Cabernet Sauvignon
nose: a huge whack of cassis when first opened, followed by pencil lead, cedar (increasing as it stayed open), chocolate and later soy sauce
palate: initially, a bit of a let down from the nose, medium body, resolved tannins, good acidity, developing more cedar character with time, good fruit

This was probably the last Caymus Cab I'll ever own, given the changes in their winemaking and pricing. There was a time in the early-to-mid '80s when I'd routinely buy their Estate Cab and I fondly remember a visit to the winery when Charles Wagner sat imposingly behind the counter pouring wines for this poor, intimidated 24-year-old protooenophile. Fortuunately, the wine in question was neither too soft nor too forward and so hearkened back to the monster wines of yesteryear. My wife Jean was heard to remark "I'd forgotten how good California Cabernet can be." I suspect that the less-favored year of '98 worked to our advantage wih this wine, keeping it from any hint of overripeness or softness. While it will not displace the '79 from my memory, I'll cherish the memories of this wine for all that it evoked in my own memory.

Mark Lipton
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Rahsaan

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Re: WTN: Speak, Memory

by Rahsaan » Tue Aug 08, 2006 9:35 am

I suspect that the less-favored year of '98 worked to our advantage wih this wine, keeping it from any hint of overripeness or softness


Wasn't 2000 a similarly "bad" year?
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James Dietz

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Re: WTN: Speak, Memory

by James Dietz » Tue Aug 08, 2006 11:45 am

Did Nabokov like this wine??? :lol:
Cheers, Jim
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Re: WTN: Speak, Memory

by Mark Lipton » Tue Aug 08, 2006 11:16 pm

Rahsaan wrote:
I suspect that the less-favored year of '98 worked to our advantage wih this wine, keeping it from any hint of overripeness or softness


Wasn't 2000 a similarly "bad" year?


Yup. I don't recall particulars, but IIRC '98 was a year of cool weather where many grapes didn't ripen "fully." I've had a number of wines from that year and they've been quite good to excellent, but as you know I'm not looking for gobbiness in my wines.

Mark Lipton
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Mark Lipton

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Re: WTN: Speak, Memory

by Mark Lipton » Tue Aug 08, 2006 11:26 pm

James Dietz wrote:Did Nabokov like this wine??? :lol:


Perhaps... and maybe, as Mayakovsky suggested, quail and pineapple? :wink:

Mark Lipton

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