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A Great Start to 2011

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ChaimShraga

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A Great Start to 2011

by ChaimShraga » Fri Jan 21, 2011 5:56 pm

From my 2GrandCru blog, a tasting centering around a Jaboulet La Chapelle vertical.

Robert Weil, Rheingau, Kiedrich Grafenberg, Riesling Auslese 1999

A sniff-and-smile nose: petrol, mellow minerality, apples, honey. On the palate, luscious fruit with a self-assured backbone. This is a wine that did a whole lot of good to all present, but it was so delicious and easy to drink that it was gone before I could dwell on it long enough.

Not available in Israel, purchased at MacArthur for about 80 USD. The sole bottle that I bought, alas.

Louis Jadot, Corton-Charlemagne, 2000

I find the nose reminiscent of a Champagne, mineral and nut laden, with the fruit very much in the background. The palate offers a firm structure but despite being enjoyable and intense, it leaves one wanting more.

Imported by WineRoute, about 450 NIS, six years in my fridge.

Vincent Girardin, Mazis-Chambertin Grand Cru, 2002

The nose is at first all reductive stink, then clears up to show red fruit and forest floor with mineral notes. Lovely, ever changing and ever improving, the aromatics really won me over. Great length and laser-like precision create an elegant, silky impression. My wine of the night, despite all the competition, ready to drink and surprisingly so.

Imported by WineRoute, price unknown.

These three were just a prelude for a Jaboulet, La Chapelle vertical - a therapeutic experience after the 2004 I had a few days before. These wines were purchased from various sources around the world, as far as I know. I did not ask about the prices. It seemed too tacky.

1996

This wine offers a lot of contradictions, especially on the palate, where sweet, yet subtle, fruit combines with rasping tannins to create an effect that I flippantly described as drinking the boots of Outlaw Jessie Wales. The nose is harder to grasp, being self-composed yet rustic in a leathery way.

1999

A fruitier nose with, initially, raw meat that is complemented later on by leather and black pepper. Very impressive by the time it warms up. The palate is, for the time being, arguably less interesting than the 1996, friendlier despite the drying tannins. Whatever, it is very yummy, and improves in the glass, showing increasingly riper acidity, until it bests the 96 by a hair - at least in potential but even right now it is a sweet yummy wine. I know I was in the minority, but I enjoyed it even more than the undoubtedly great 1990.

1988

Corky.

1989

Not quite the therapy I needed. Claims that it was dying in glass abounded. Understandably so. Madeiraized

1990

The best of all possible worlds: a peppery nose with hints of herbs and a balanced and tasty palate. On a purely personal level, I enjoyed the 1999 more, but this is a profound wine. 2GrandCru writes no more.
Positive Discrimination For White Wines!
http://2GrandCru.blogspot.com
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Salil

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Re: A Great Start to 2011

by Salil » Fri Jan 21, 2011 6:15 pm

A shame about those 2 Jaboulet no-shows. But glad the 90 showed well, I've heard that is a stunning wine.

Weil's Grafenberg Auslese (well, anything from that site) is a monumental wine. The '01 KG Auslese is a wine that got me seriously hooked on German wine (which I had only casually enjoyed without much further interest before that bottle). Hmm... now I'm tempted to grab one of my Weil Grafenbergs...
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ChaimShraga

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Re: A Great Start to 2011

by ChaimShraga » Fri Jan 21, 2011 6:23 pm

Funny, I think of monumental wines as wines where you just sit and gawk whereas the Grafenberg was so easy to drink, it just sort of phased into my being without crying out, "hey! look at me!".

The stunning, monumental wines are almost easier to handle because you just accept their greatness as existing on another sphere, but wines like the Grafenberg are just so self assured and complacent about their quality that I find myself thinking, "every wine should behave like this" and therein lies the road to madness, because, sadly, that is not the case.
Positive Discrimination For White Wines!
http://2GrandCru.blogspot.com
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Fredrik L

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Re: A Great Start to 2011

by Fredrik L » Sat Jan 22, 2011 5:16 am

And keep in mind that 1999 was a very disappointing vintage for Weil... Together with 2000 probably the weakest seen in no less than twenty years. What does that mean, then? That the quality Wilhelm Weil gets from this great terroir year in and year out is absolutely stunning. In fact, the GS and the GA are among the very few wines I dare buy blind!

Greetings from Sweden / Fredrik L

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