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WTN: Cornas

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Bill Spohn

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WTN: Cornas

by Bill Spohn » Sun Apr 28, 2019 3:19 pm

Notes from a blind tasting, theme: Cornas.

2016 Paul Jaboulet Aîné St. Péray Les Sauvagères – this starter wine was Marsanne based, light in colour and although the nose was a tad reticent until it warmed slightly, it then showed some decent stone fruit and lemon elements. In the mouth, a hit of acid up from and then sweetness with a medium long finish. Interestingly, Parker, in his Rhone book stated that St-Peray was the ‘Jurassic Park of the Rhone’ and that its output consisted of ‘dull still wines and dull sparkling wines and that there was not future for it. I’d say that his prediction was proven wrong.

2017 Domaine Vincent Paris Vin de Pays Granit Blanc – as my assignment for the tasting was simply Cornas, and this wine was made in Cornas by a Cornas producer, it qualified even though it has to be labeled a Vin de Pays. Viognier and Roussanne. It had pear and hints of lilac in the nose, a smooth middle and was balanced and tasty.

1999 Jean-Luc Colombo Cornas Les Mejeans – dark wine with bricky edges, a bit of animal in the nose, and some nice raspberry. Sweet entry good balancing acidity and at or perhaps slightly past peak.

1999 Jean-Luc Colombo Cornas Les Ruchets – when I saw the previous wine, I put my wine next. Darker, with a slight funk, lots of raspberry and some black olives and a hint of bacon in the nose, and more stuffing and better length than the Mejeans, but both were enjoyable.

2013 Jean-Luc Colombo Cornas La Louvée – more modern style with a sweet berry nose, a tad ripe and roasty, very dark colour and plenty of soft tannin – obviously ‘new style’ as traditional Cornas would have been untouchable at this age. Decent now, but I much preferred the older wines.

2015 Vincent Paris Granit 60 Cornas Vieilles Vignes – an up and coming vintner, he is the nephew of Robert Michel, one of the best producers in the area (along with Clape). He arranged a rental of his best vineyards to Vincent when he retired. This wine is very dark and shows a nose that opened to spicy dark cherry aromas. Tons of relatively soft tannin but drinkable now. I shall be letting my stash rest for a few years before starting in on it.

2013 Domaine Vincent Paris Cornas Granit 30 – bright garnet colour with a nose of raspberry with hints of anise. Elegant (for a Cornas) with good length. Drinks well now, but don’t make the mistake of drinking just yet!

2010 Delas Frères Cornas Chante-Perdrix – dark wine with an interesting nose that included both black olive and caramel. On palate, well balanced but with very light dill and sour notes, but not in a bad way. Drinks nicely now.

2015 Paul Jaboulet Aîné Cornas Les Grandes Terrasses – wow! Youth plundered early! An oddly rubbery nose that resolved as wet earth and currant. Way early for this wine – although it had excellent concentration, it showed no flavour differentiation and needs maybe a decade to get to the point where it develops some subtlety and complexity.

Finally, the cheese wine:

1992 Quinta do Vesuvio Port – my first look at this wine as I figured it was time to assess it for aging. Dark wine with clear edges, a ripe sweet nose, a tad spirity at this point and on the sweet side, but good balancing acidity. Quite good. I shall not open another bottle for maybe five years or so. Difficult vintage with close to drought conditions. Decanted for three hours. I like to leave some in the decanter to take another look the next day but the greedy buggers drank it all up when my back was turned!
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David M. Bueker

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Re: WTN: Cornas

by David M. Bueker » Sun Apr 28, 2019 3:24 pm

Colombo moved to a modern style in the 1990s. I suspect your preference for the older wines was based on what time did to them, rather than some shift in winemaking.
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Re: WTN: Cornas

by Bill Spohn » Sun Apr 28, 2019 3:42 pm

I slowly worked my way through a case of the exquisite 1991 from Colombo and the style was consistent. The newer wines seem to be a bit different style - certainly since his daughter took over as winemaker for the 2010 vintage. Will keep an eye on them as I taste newer vintages, though - you could be right.
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Re: WTN: Cornas

by David M. Bueker » Sun Apr 28, 2019 3:59 pm

I think the style shift was in 1997.
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Tim York

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Re: WTN: Cornas

by Tim York » Mon Apr 29, 2019 5:27 am

Thanks for those interesting notes. I have been boycotting Colombo ever since a Cornas tasting in the late 90s when his wines appeared oaky and international in style compared with the apparently much more place specific offerings from Clape, Allemand, Voge, etc. It seems that I may have been wrong and that Cornas character emerges with age.

There are a number of Cornas from Colombo on sale at our local hypermarket for around 25€ and I am tempted to take another look. I think 2015 is probably too young and 2002 was a weak vintage (but Clape made a good one). If I can find one with around 8+ years age, I'll take the plunge.
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Re: WTN: Cornas

by Bill Spohn » Mon Apr 29, 2019 9:58 am

Let us know how it tastes if you do get it, Tim.

That is a great price - we pay over $100 Can, for the 2013 Colombo Louvee, for instance.
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Re: WTN: Cornas

by Tim York » Sat Jun 15, 2019 4:42 pm

I picked up this Cornas from Colombo at the local super market for €35. A 2015 can be had for €25 but I figured that would be likely to be too cloying for me unless the generation change has brought about a radically different style.

2004 Jean-Luc Colombo Cornas Les Terres Brûlées - France, Rhône, Northern Rhône, Cornas (6/15/2019)
I have been prejudiced against Colombo's wines ever since a horizontal tasting about 20 years ago of several producers where I found that his cuvées stood out in an unwelcome way for their oaky international anonymity. This bottle does not really dissipate that prejudice. It had quite deep carmine colour and medium++ body with smooth sweetish red and dark fruit, some depth, a touch of antique polish, suave texture, a now well integrated patina from oak ageing, residual structural firmness on the finish and fresh acidity which became more obtrusive and rasping after food towards the end of the bottle. If I had been blind, I doubt if I would have recognised this as N.Rhône, let alone Cornas, or its derivation from Syrah. Good enjoyable wine, though, particularly if that does not bother you.
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Last edited by Tim York on Sun Jun 16, 2019 10:40 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: WTN: Cornas

by Bill Spohn » Sat Jun 15, 2019 5:17 pm

Sounds disappointing if one expects typicity, but otherwise not unpleasant. Thanks for the note.
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Paul Winalski

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Re: WTN: Cornas

by Paul Winalski » Tue Jun 18, 2019 2:50 pm

Bill Spohn wrote:Sounds disappointing if one expects typicity, but otherwise not unpleasant.


Precisely my take on Colombo's Cornas, and the reason I've always preferred Clape and Voge. Cornas is hideously expensive around here, and I can get pleasant, generic international-style reds for a lot less.

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