Tried these two @ Cam's in NYC a week ago:
1. Batic Zaria V.O. Vipavska Dolina (13%; 50% Pinela/25% Rebula/25% Zelen; BlueDanubeWineCo) 2012: Med.gold/copper color; strong appley/apple cider/very resiny quite phenolic bit dirty feet/athlete's foot fungus interesting nose; soft very phenolic/metallic/tangy very resiny/apple cider little fruit flavor w/ strong tannic bite; very long very phenolic/resiny slight wet dog fur finish w/ hard tannic bite; a pretty classic heavy skin-contact white w/ heavy phenolic loading but no oxidative character; shows a little bit of fusty/funky character but not enough to ruin the wine. $14.00 (AmsterdamWineCo)
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2. Kozlovic Malvazija Istria (13.0%; L2014) Croatia 2013: Light gold color; strong floral/apple blossom/peach blossom lightly muscatty bit mineral/chalky pleasant nose; bit tart/tangy lightly muscatty/floral rather stony/mineral/chalky flavor; med.long tart/tangy/bit metallic light floral/muscatty/orange blossom bit chalky/mineral finish; a rather pleasant Malvasia w/ light muscatty character. $20.00 (AmsterdamWineCo)
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A wee BloodyPulpit:
1. Pinela: This is a grape variety some think native to the Veneto, some think Slovenia. Whichever, from this wine it's not clear that Pinela should be planted all up & down the coast of Calif.
The Zaria name is Slovene for "dawn". Named such because it represent the new dawn of ancient Georgian winemaking techniques.
This wine was made w/ skin contact throughout fermentation and then some. But not made as a traditional "orange" wine has it had no oxidative character. The wine had a very heavy phenolic loading and was rather painful to taste/drink on its own. Not a good wine. But when tasted w/ brined/savory black olives, the wine was much/much better to drink and actually rather pleasurable.
The wine was originally priced at $40/btl. My guess is that this totally misunderstood wine tasted so bad to conventional drinkers that BlueDanube had to unload the stuff at a super/cheap price.
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2. Malvasia: This Croatian Malvasia is made from the Malvasia d'Istriana grape variety....common to this area around the Istrian Peninsula. This was a rather pleasant Malvasia but not as good as most Friuli/Slovene renditions of this grape. My impression is that Croatian winemaking is not yet at the level of Friuli or Slovenia.
Tom.

