by Jenise » Sat Mar 24, 2007 12:56 pm
2005 Matua Paratai Sauvignon Blanc: cheesy nose suggests NZ. I found the midpalate a bit lacking in the citrus basket of fruit I think typical of, and attractive about, NZ wines. I didn't dislike it, but I was out of synch with the group about it's merits.
Alianca NV Tinto Bruto: nothing much to add here, except that I quite liked this little guy, but then I'm a sucker for fizz. Bet I'd like it even better after a couple years in the bottle when it picks up some secondary complexity.
1985 Drouhin Beaune Clos des Mouches: lovely red-orange color, unmistakeably old burg in the nose. No tannins left, but enough acidity to make it bright and interesting. My WOTL.
1975 Ch. Boyd Cantenac: your wine. You described it well, I only need to add that I liked it quite a bit. It's actually the first Boyd Cantenac I've ever had, for all the Bordeaux I drink/seek out it's just managed to escape my little grasp until now. Glad to have my first introduction with a properly aged model, thanks.
1988 Haut Bailly: perhaps the most meaningful thing I can add to your description is that we immediately pegged this incorrectly as an 85 (at least, you and I did, and the table seemed to go along with it), and that 88 was third to the last 80's vintage (84 and 81 not having been named) we thought this wine would be from.
2000 Tolo Asfini: my wine, purchased at the winery on a PR visit last September. Couldn't have been more shocked to hear the alcohol level--I spit out wine after wine there that were only 15% and tasted like Vodka to me, that this was over 16 and that I liked it? Doesn't seem possible. But the alcohol didn't show yesterday either. Interesting blend that worked very well here, producing a wine that's big but not heavy.
2001 Bersano Generala Barbera d’Asti: what you said.
1994 Heitz Napa Cabernet: Great showing for a humble "regular" wine. Instantly recognizable as California, and fairly youthful in that there wasn't much secondary development in evidence, as one might have predicted.
1999 St. Cosme Cote Rotie: lovely Northern Rhone; I'd have guessed Cornas over Cote-Rotie. No pepper, and no tire marks. Rich, supple, drinking very well now.
2002 Hazyblur Baroota Shiraz (Clare Valley): So we figured out where Baroota is, did we? Drank like a McClaren Vale--very plush, no sharp edges, a velveteen Ribena. Interesting to taste a wine with so much recent ballyhoo.
1990 Penfolds Bin 707 Cabernet: can't improve on your description. Seemed immediately apparent it was California or Australia, I favored the former but you went with the latter and were right. Very definite eucalyptus nose, no mint or menthol which are often mistaken for it, and yes sweet in the approach but it's still holding something back, at least compared to most Aussie wines. You know what, some wondered about this wine's placement, but I liked where Manny put it between the two other Southern Hemisphere wines where the differences were even more acute.
2001 Errazuriz Vinedo Chadwick: all the things you say and very, very, very impressive. Had no idea Errazuriz was capable of a wine of this caliber.
My wine shopping and I have never had a problem. Just a perpetual race between the bankruptcy court and Hell.--Rogov