- Not if I can help it!Covert wrote:Thanks, David. Do you drink Bordeaux right along side Australian wines?
- Don't believe everything you read, Covert. I don't buy or go for the big, jammy, high alcohol stuff that RPJ and his sycophants are so keen on.Covert wrote:I read that many Australian reds are pretty forward, ultra ripe and hot.
- Over recent months, and for a variety of reaosns, I have opened, at most, half a dozen Aussie reds, usually drinking the bottle over a couple of days. Most have been 10-15 years old (some older). I find I'm struggling to find anything like the complexity and enjoyment I get from a mature claret (e.g. '61, '78, '79, '82, '85) or a top red burgundy from '93 or '96.Covert wrote:When I very infrequently drink Bordeaux at the same time as California cabs, I find that I can hardly taste the Bordeaux because of the higher noise level of the American wines. If a Bordeaux under this circumstance seemed backward and unresolved, I might try another bottle in a few days after my last taste of a California wine.
David Lole wrote: Over recent months, and for a variety of reaosns, I have opened, at most, half a dozen Aussie reds, usually drinking the bottle over a couple of days. Most have been 10-15 years old (some older). I find I'm struggling to find anything like the complexity and enjoyment I get from a mature claret (e.g. '61, '78, '79, '82, '85) or a top red burgundy from '93 or '96.
My cellar, once (a long time ago now, it must be said) mostly full of Aussie benchmark/blue chip reds (e.g. Penfolds (Grange, 707 etc) and Henschke (Hill of Grace and Cyril Henschke, Mount Edelstone) amongst many others), now has ONE bottle of very old Penfolds Special Bin red and perhaps a couple of mixed cases of Mount Edelstone ('94-'96) and Keyneton Estate ('96 and '98 ). Quite a few of the Henschke's have been earmarked for the chopper! Perhaps you may have gone through similar stylistic changes with your drinking preferences over the years, too?
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