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WTN: Italy, Loire, Beaujolais, Finger Lakes, etc

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Dale Williams

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WTN: Italy, Loire, Beaujolais, Finger Lakes, etc

by Dale Williams » Fri Oct 23, 2015 2:25 pm

Spent all day Sunday working (meeting), then came home, walked the dog, did finishing touches on my dish, grabbed wine, and headed to neighbors for a friend’s birthday dinner.

They had out radishes with butter, I put out my shrimp/chevre salad in endive, and we started with bubbly:

NV Bremont “Cuvee Prestige” Brut Champagne
Full, rich, but with crisp acids, white fruit (apple and pear) with baked bread. Nice, long. B+/A-

NV Rimarts Cava Reserva “18”
This is quite snappy, fresh, with lemon and anise over green apple fruit. Good value, wish it has been served before the Bremont. B/B+

Dinner was osso buco, lemon risotto, brussels sprouts, and salad

2001 Marcarini “Brunate” Barolo
Double decanted a few hours before dinner, this showed nicely. Red and black cherries, tar, some floral topnotes. Tannins are there but rather refined, good acids, no hurry but this was already enjoyable with some air. A-/B+

2007 Rivetto “Del Comune Di Serralunga D'Alba” Barolo
Not a producer I know, ripe red fruit, a little coffee, pleasant and surprisingly ready. Tasty though not especially Nebbioloish to me, B

2009 Lorenzo Alutto Barbaresco
Ripe, some tannin, but youngest wine is the one that seems flat and tired. B-/C+

Monday I grilled artic char; served with brown rice, leftover turnip greens and cabbage. Wine was the 2014 Guion Bourgueil rose. Medium bodied, wild strawberry and citrus zest, nice food wine. B

Tuesday was BBQ tofu, broccoli with red peppers and a soy/sesame dressing, and radishleaf pesto potato salad. Wine was the 2014 Roilette (Coudert) Fleurie. Fairly light but with nice flavor profile, bright red fruits with spice and smoke. Others think this is to age, I think I’m drinking (and enjoying) these young, Don’t doubt it will age, but unlike say ‘05 not sure this will improve. B+

Wednesday was spicy roast chicken breast with a mint sauce, more potato salad, and brussels sprouts. Wine was the 2012 Occhipinti SP68. Red fruit, lots of spice, a little barnyard edge. Nice wine, but not as compelling as her pure Frappato. B

Thursday we went to friends’ home for dinner (and to meet their new cat), they served pasta (they’re gluten-free . but this Bionaturae GF pasta was better than any I’ve tasted, world’s better than brown rice pasts) with a bacon/parsnip/fennel sauce, cabbage, and salad. Wine was the 2014 Weimer Chardonnay. I like some of Weimer’s wines, but this was sweet canned pear juice. There was some acid underneath, and no real oak, but I found cloying. C+

But great people, great cat, tasty food, and nice setting.

Grade disclaimer: I'm a very easy grader, basically A is an excellent wine, B a good wine, C drinkable. 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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David M. Bueker

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Re: WTN: Italy, Loire, Beaujolais, Finger Lakes, etc

by David M. Bueker » Fri Oct 23, 2015 3:33 pm

Marcarini is just so good. The wines don't take decades to become drinkable, while still being authentically Barolo. Why I do not buy more of them is totally beyond me.
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Re: WTN: Italy, Loire, Beaujolais, Finger Lakes, etc

by Rahsaan » Fri Oct 23, 2015 8:42 pm

Dale Williams wrote:2014 Roilette (Coudert) Fleurie. Fairly light but with nice flavor profile, bright red fruits with spice and smoke. Others think this is to age, I think I’m drinking (and enjoying) these young, Don’t doubt it will age, but unlike say ‘05 not sure this will improve.


I haven't had any 2014 Beaujolais yet. (And passed on buying the Coudert recently, just because I have too much of a backlog) But in general, my strategy with Beaujolais is definitely to drink it if it shows well, even if it *could* age. Because I don't need more wines that require age. You may have different calculations, but apparently have arrived at a similar conclusion.
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David M. Bueker

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Re: WTN: Italy, Loire, Beaujolais, Finger Lakes, etc

by David M. Bueker » Sat Oct 24, 2015 3:21 am

Rahsaan,

Your comment caused me to do a little CellarTracker sleuthing. It turns out that I consume about 6 bottles of Beaujolais per year. The glacial cellar has a 9 year supply. I should not be buying any no matter how good it is, but if I do it had better be ageable!
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Bob Parsons Alberta

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Re: WTN: Italy, Loire, Beaujolais, Finger Lakes, etc

by Bob Parsons Alberta » Sat Oct 24, 2015 7:19 am

Just knew Rahsaan would show up with the mention of Beaujolais.
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Tom NJ

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Re: WTN: Italy, Loire, Beaujolais, Finger Lakes, etc

by Tom NJ » Sat Oct 24, 2015 10:34 am

How did they prepare the cat?
"He ordered as one to the Menu born...."
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David M. Bueker

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Re: WTN: Italy, Loire, Beaujolais, Finger Lakes, etc

by David M. Bueker » Sat Oct 24, 2015 11:42 am

Tom NJ wrote:How did they prepare the cat?


Gaa!!
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Re: WTN: Italy, Loire, Beaujolais, Finger Lakes, etc

by Tom NJ » Sat Oct 24, 2015 12:58 pm

David M. Bueker wrote:Gaa!!


Lol. I was waiting for someone to respond: "...with a nice moose-cat" :lol:
"He ordered as one to the Menu born...."
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Rahsaan

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Re: WTN: Italy, Loire, Beaujolais, Finger Lakes, etc

by Rahsaan » Sat Oct 24, 2015 6:00 pm

David M. Bueker wrote:It turns out that I consume about 6 bottles of Beaujolais per year.


Wow. Interesting.

Obviously we all have our own drinking patterns. For me, Beaujolais is so drinkable, it's a welcome balance to the red Burgundies I have waiting around forever.

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