The place for all things wine, focused on serious wine discussions.

Clos Sainte Hune 1976 and Bienvenue Batard Montrachet Leflaive 1999

Moderators: Jenise, Robin Garr, David M. Bueker

no avatar
User

François Audouze

Rank

Ultra geek

Posts

187

Joined

Tue Mar 21, 2006 3:05 pm

Location

Noisy-leSec France

Clos Sainte Hune 1976 and Bienvenue Batard Montrachet Leflaive 1999

by François Audouze » Wed May 23, 2007 4:42 pm

I had met the director of a magazine specialised in wine, and he had considered the idea that I could write in it on old wines as I do regularly in a Swedish magazine. He had insisted that we have lunch together and the day before, his secretary calls me and says : “Mr XX is happy to have lunch with you. Has the place been decided between you ?”. I say no, and she proposes to reserve in a restaurant, and asks me if there is a place where I feel well. I say “Laurent”, and she sends me an email confirming that she has booked.

This morning, the lady calls me and says that Mr XX wants to talk with me. He says that he is happy that we meet, but says : “I would be happy to know who invites whom. Because if it is you, I will be happy to go to Laurent, but if it is me, I will have to choose another place, as we have rules and budgets for invitations”. I say that there is no problem and I invite him.

I arrive first, and I ask Ghislain to prepare a Riesling Clos Sainte Hune Trimbach 1976, a year that I specially love, and we will choose the other wine with the menu.

I suggest that we have crab with the Sainte Hune, and I propose an unconventional try, which is to associate a pigeon to white wine. Philippe Bourguignon, the remarkable director of the place smiles and says that it should be interesting, and I take a Bienvenue Batard Montrachet Domaine Leflaive 1999.

The Sainte Hune appears a little too cold, so the first sip has citrus and a disagreeable taste of glycerine. But the colour is so nice, of prune gold, that it promises a lot. And the wine expands in the glass and broadens with air and becomes ageless, completely balanced and logically structured. It is a wine of perfection. And the crab enlarges even more the wine.

We are happy.

The Bienvenue has a more pale and green yellow colour, has a smell with a fantastic complexity, and on the taste of the meat of the pigeon, it gains a complexity which is my complete pleasure. My guest is not so much at ease with this association, but personally, I find it quite exciting. The wine has a complexity that is above the one of many Montrachet. It has not the body, the power of a Montrachet, but it compensates it by this extreme variety of directions of tastes. It is obviously a great wine. It is elegant, romantic, playing on its subtlety.

We finish the two wines with cheese and some mignardises.

The restaurant Laurent is obviously a fantastic place which should never had lost one star. We were in the garden and it was delightful. The service is perfect and the food was great. Philippe had added morels to the pigeon to go with the Burgundy.

This was happiness. Will I write in the magazine ? I have probably built the first subject of a future paper, if I forget the beginning of my story
Old wines are younger than what is generally considered
no avatar
User

Jenise

Rank

FLDG Dishwasher

Posts

43610

Joined

Tue Mar 21, 2006 2:45 pm

Location

The Pacific Northest Westest

Re: Clos Sainte Hune 1976 and Bienvenue Batard Montrachet Leflaive 1999

by Jenise » Wed May 23, 2007 5:22 pm

Francois, finally you write about a restaurant I have been to. It was September of 1986, and the wine was just a Premier Cru Chassagne Montrachet, but I had never had anything but California chardonnay before that night and I knew instantly that this wine was man y levels beyond any white wines I'd ever had, and it planted the very seed, that sense that life without another experience like that was unthinkable no matter the cost, that is now my obsession with wine. The label from that bottle was kindly soaked off by our waiter, and it hangs in our wine cellar to this day. We did not have pigeon, we had duck, and it was served in a complex sauce involving fresh red currants, and that course followed my first ever experience with foie gras, another unforgettable course that started another life quest. Thanks for bringing it all back with your note.
My wine shopping and I have never had a problem. Just a perpetual race between the bankruptcy court and Hell.--Rogov
no avatar
User

François Audouze

Rank

Ultra geek

Posts

187

Joined

Tue Mar 21, 2006 3:05 pm

Location

Noisy-leSec France

Re: Clos Sainte Hune 1976 and Bienvenue Batard Montrachet Leflaive 1999

by François Audouze » Wed May 23, 2007 5:59 pm

Such great experiences like the one you had build our life.
Congratulations.
Laurent is the beloved restaurant for my wife, as the atmosphere is one of the quietest of all Parisian great restaurants.
Old wines are younger than what is generally considered
no avatar
User

Clinton Macsherry

Rank

Ultra geek

Posts

354

Joined

Tue Mar 28, 2006 1:50 pm

Location

Baltimore MD

Re: Clos Sainte Hune 1976 and Bienvenue Batard Montrachet Leflaive 1999

by Clinton Macsherry » Thu May 24, 2007 9:37 am

Jenise wrote:It was September of 1986, and the wine was just a Premier Cru Chassagne Montrachet . . .


You often ask about posters' wine epiphanies, Jenise, which is a great question and has elicited wonderful responses. Sounds like this may have been yours?
FEAR THE TURTLE ! ! !

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: AhrefsBot, ClaudeBot and 5 guests

Powered by phpBB ® | phpBB3 Style by KomiDesign