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WTN: Chalonaise, Sonoma, Loire, and Lazio

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Dale Williams

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WTN: Chalonaise, Sonoma, Loire, and Lazio

by Dale Williams » Sun Sep 23, 2012 5:05 pm

Tuesday I grilled some salmon, made a kind of hashbrowny dish from potato pulp leftover from a potato skin recipe, and put out some assorted leftover greens along with the 2010 Cowan Cellars “Bennet Valley” Pinot Noir. This has calmed down nicely compared to a slightly screechy bottle last year. Plenty of fruit, acidity in balance, some tannin, better with air. No hurry on these. B+/B

Wednesday was chicken apple sausages, caprese, and assorted leftovers; wine was the 1995 Falesco “Montiano” (Lazio). I’m not really a fan of international (French) varieties in Italy, and I’ve been known to make disparaging comments re jetset winemakers like the Cotarellas. Yet I must confess I’ve always found myself enjoying the Montiano (the Marciliano, not so much). So when a big lot (‘95, ‘97, ‘98,’99)was at a good price at auction recently, I bit. Then of course buyer’s angst- the plurality of lot was 1995, which was my favorite at a vertical, but that was 8 years ago, how had it held? Better to get it over with. Whew, relief. Black plum and cherry fruit, good acids, some barnyard funk that’s ok with me (I didn’t go to UC-Davis). Leathery. So sure this isn’t especially Italian, but a nice midmodern Merlot that would be a good ringer in a flight of modern Pomerols. This did begin to crack up - a tad volatile, growing ashtray notes- pretty quickly, but first 90 minutes were fine. For then, B+ (after 3 hours, C+, on day 2, C- and rest of bottle into vinegar crock). So I know others are party wines, open when they go around a big table, as opposed to my weeknight nursing a bottle for 5 hours (and checking in next day)

Thursday was just me, chicken and white bean chili, and the 2011 Baudry Chinon rose. Not much to add to previous notes on this, a beautiful pink in a more restrained/serious style. Holds up well over 3 nights. B+

Friday was grilled ahi, pasta with pesto, and salad, plus the 2007 Baudry Chinon (the straight domaine bottling). I don’t know if it was me or the wine, but I just couldn’t get up any enthusiasm for this on this night. I’ve liked a lot before (and am generally a huge Baudry fan). No discernable flaw- some dark fruit, a little tobacco leaf, good acids- but just didn’t seem to sing to me. Peculiar. B-/C+

Saturday farmer’s market led to LI sea scallops, with corn and caprese, and I decided to open the 2009 de Villaine Bouzeron Aligote. Grapefruit and lemon, a touch of stones, decent length. Better with food than after. 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.
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Brian Gilp

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Re: WTN: Chalonaise, Sonoma, Loire, and Lazio

by Brian Gilp » Sun Sep 23, 2012 6:17 pm

I have never even thought about a chicken and white bean chili. Are those straight substitutions in whatever chili recipe one were to use or something completely different?
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Andrew Bair

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Re: WTN: Chalonaise, Sonoma, Loire, and Lazio

by Andrew Bair » Tue Sep 25, 2012 5:26 pm

Hi Dale -

Thank you for the notes, especially on the de Villane Bouzeron. I've enjoyed this in the past, but haven't had it in a while, and was thinking that I should look for another bottle one of these days. Have you had any previous vintages before, and if so, did you prefer them over the 2009?
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Richard Fadeley OLD

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Re: WTN: Chalonaise, Sonoma, Loire, and Lazio

by Richard Fadeley OLD » Tue Sep 25, 2012 9:57 pm

Brian Gilp wrote:I have never even thought about a chicken and white bean chili.

Ruby Tuesday's has a nice version of this on their menu that's quite good with their salad. Never had with a wine though.
Richard Fadeley, CWS
aka Webwineman

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