Otto Nieminen wrote:Domaine Comte Georges de Vogüé Chambolle-Musigny 2004 is an oddity among the Vogüés I've so far tasted. This isn't at all as showy and flashy as the others, in fact it is earthy and restrained and vegetal and very much what I like to see in my Burgundies.
Bill Hooper wrote:Otto,
I like Foradori very much. The 'regular' is classic, delicious and cheap ($20), and the Granato has been very imressive in the past (though expensive). The 2001 was spectacular IMO, and the '02 very good, but in need of a long nap. I haven't yet tried the '03, but I imagine you've hit the nail on the head. The time will come when the 2003 vintage is indeed a distant memory. Have you tried Foradori's Bianco (Myrto? or something)?
Sounds like they were smart and gave it the treatment the vintage demanded.
I am waiting to taste this one [Lageder '03], once I get my hands on the bottle ... what did you exactly not like in it?
Florida Jim
Wine guru
1253
Wed Mar 22, 2006 1:27 pm
St. Pete., FL & Sonoma, CA
Otto Nieminen wrote:Romano dal Forno Amarone della Valpolicella 2001 [Otto hides behind more intrepid tasters and whimpers pathetically] oh my! Big. Massive. Huge. Supermegaconcentrated. On the positive note, it does hide its 17% abv pretty well... but in my funny, little, narrowminded world it is never a good thing to have such an abv in an unfortified wine. Impressive but for all the wrong reasons.
Domaine Comte Georges de Vogüé Chambolle-Musigny 2004 is an oddity among the Vogüés I've so far tasted. This isn't at all as showy and flashy as the others, in fact it is earthy and restrained and vegetal and very much what I like to see in my Burgundies. This is the first Vogüé that I would like to buy for my cellar (were the price right, which it never seems to be with this producer).
Otto Nieminen wrote:Sounds like they were smart and gave it the treatment the vintage demanded.
What exactly do you mean?
Rahsaan wrote:They are often criticized for too much extraction and oak but in a crisp vintage like 04 it sounds like they didn't try to make this a "powerful" wine but rather stayed true to the crisp nature of the vintage. Which seems like a good decision.
Otto Nieminen wrote:Bill Hooper wrote:Otto,
I like Foradori very much. The 'regular' is classic, delicious and cheap ($20), and the Granato has been very imressive in the past (though expensive). The 2001 was spectacular IMO, and the '02 very good, but in need of a long nap. I haven't yet tried the '03, but I imagine you've hit the nail on the head. The time will come when the 2003 vintage is indeed a distant memory. Have you tried Foradori's Bianco (Myrto? or something)?
David M. Bueker
Childless Cat Dad
34945
Thu Mar 23, 2006 11:52 am
Connecticut
David M. Bueker wrote:It's interesting that you call out the vegetal character of a 2004 Burgundy as something you like. the vintage is being castigated elsewhere for every little hint of anything green.
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