The place for all things wine, focused on serious wine discussions.

WTN: week of French wines (one Italian interloper)

Moderators: Jenise, Robin Garr, David M. Bueker

no avatar
User

Dale Williams

Rank

Compassionate Connoisseur

Posts

12048

Joined

Tue Mar 21, 2006 4:32 pm

Location

Dobbs Ferry, NY (NYC metro)

WTN: week of French wines (one Italian interloper)

by Dale Williams » Sat Mar 24, 2012 6:22 pm

Over several days the 2010 Duffour (Cotes de Gascogne) was used as an apertif and cooking wine. Grassy and sassy. I'd assume some SB in the mix. Light, crisp, simple but good warm weather wine. But I wouldn't serve to David B. B/B-

Sunday I made ratatouille before going off to speak to a youth group, Betsy returned from matinee and made salad, by time I returned she had radish leaf pesto bruschetta ready, and we had dinner and the 2010 Barou Marsanne. Oily, a bit soft, didn't really do it for me, but probably less the wine's fault than I just am wrong person for Rhone whites. B-/C+

Tuesday was flounder in panko, haiga rice with furikake, and baby bok choy salad. Wine was a recent auction buy, the 1989 Zind-Humbrecht "Turckheim" Riesling. I think this was first year Olivier was fully in charge. Good news is (a) the wine is intact and rather youthful and (b) it's not a sweet blowsy wine. Dry, ginger and lots of petrol. Solid enough wine but I can't help to compare to the home runs that are the '89 Trimbach CFE and CFE VT. But nice mature Alsace Riesling. B

Wednesday Betsy made turkey meatballs and used leftover ratatouille as a sauce base, then broccoli and the 2009 Felsina Chianti Classico filled out the meal. Tight, a bit dense, and a bit tannic when opened, I wasn't really enjoying this. But about 2 hours of air seemed to help a lot, black cherry fruit with earth and a slight mocha note. Full fruit with time, good acidic balance, I enjoyed a lot at end. B+

No wine Thursday, a board meeting followed by a trip to city. A friend was soloing this weekend while his wife is in CA, so we invited him to dinner Friday. After I (slowly) shucked a dozen lovely Bluepoints, we enjoyed with the 2009 Pepiere "Granite de Clisson" Muscadet. Full, rich, but truly vibrant acids and a seashell/saline minerality. This is like Raveneau Blanchots meets Briords. Me likes. A-

Main course was duck breast served over green beans and arugula, with mashed potatoes on side, and 2 reds:

1999 Maurice Ecard "Les Jarrons" Savigny-les-Beaune 1er
This is a vineyard I'm not familiar with, though I'm a fan of pre-2005 Ecard.
Pretty much not a fan at first- high/disjointed acids, a cranberry/pomegranite edge to the fruit that seems tart and sour. Again, time works some magic, blacker fruits emerging, some dirt and forest floor notes, the acidity seemingly more integrated. C+ to start, B+ with cleanup.

2008 Breton "Les Galichets" Bourgueil
This on the other hand drank well from moment opened. Blackcurrant with herb and discrete green pepper, lively acids, light tannins, good length. B+

Grade disclaimer: I'm a very easy grader, basically A is an excellent wine, B a good wine, C mediocre. Anything below C means I wouldn't drink at a party where it was only choice. Furthermore, I offer no promises of objectivity, accuracy, and certainly not of consistency.
no avatar
User

Rahsaan

Rank

Wild and Crazy Guy

Posts

9803

Joined

Tue Mar 28, 2006 8:20 pm

Location

New York, NY

Re: WTN: week of French wines (one Italian interloper)

by Rahsaan » Sat Mar 24, 2012 6:32 pm

Dale Williams wrote:1999 Maurice Ecard "Les Jarrons" Savigny-les-Beaune 1er
This is a vineyard I'm not familiar with, though I'm a fan of pre-2005 Ecard.


You probably know it by another name: La Dominode. Les Jarrons is a vineyard with three distinct sub-parcels entitled to their own AOC Premier Cru. The largest is the sub-parcel La Dominode. There are also two other smaller sub-parcels: Les Haut Jarrons and Les Jarrons.

Therefore, in good Burgundian fashion, Les Jarrons is a vineyard as well as a vineyard within a vineyard!

But I wonder if all wines labeled Les Jarrons come only from the sub-parcel or if some producers blend grapes from the different sub-parcels, all of which are technically Les Jarrons. Does anyone know?
no avatar
User

Dale Williams

Rank

Compassionate Connoisseur

Posts

12048

Joined

Tue Mar 21, 2006 4:32 pm

Location

Dobbs Ferry, NY (NYC metro)

Re: WTN: week of French wines (one Italian interloper)

by Dale Williams » Sun Mar 25, 2012 10:54 am

thanks Rahsaan, indeed I have several La Dominode SlBs from couple of producers, interesting to know.

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: AhrefsBot, ByteSpider, ClaudeBot, FB-extagent and 4 guests

Powered by phpBB ® | phpBB3 Style by KomiDesign