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by
Tom Hill
A
self-admitted wine geek, Tom lives in Northern New Mexico
and works as a computational physicist at Los Alamos National
Laboratory doing numerical neutron transport & large scale
code development. He has been tasting wines since 1971, participates
locally with a couple of large tasting groups in his area,
and is practically a fixture at most California wine festivals,
such as the Hospice du Rhône, Rhône Rangers, and
ZAP. Other interests: Tom is heavily into competitive sport
fencing (foil & epee), biking, cooking, basketball, skiing,
backpacking, mountain climbing.
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White Rhones - May 23, 2001
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GRAND
TASTING
The
wineries here pouring were only those from National Distributing,
the largest distributor in New Mexico. Three wines stood
out:
- Phelps
Auction Barrel '99: This is a special barrel that
Craig Williams has assembled for the NapaVlly auction,
only for those in the trade appartently. It is 80% Syrah
and 20%
- Insignia
Cabernet. Incredible wine... of Insignia quality.
Black color, loads of intense Syrah/blackberry/boysenberry
fruit; some toasty oak; huge rich flavor. Easily the best
Phelps "Syrah" ever, as good as any of the Aussie high-end
Shiraz which it most closely resembled. Wisht Craig would
make all his Syrahs like this wine.
- Canoe
Ridge Reserve Merlot '96: Hard to believe TomHill
would deign to try a Merlot. Very dark color; intense
blackcurranty/dusty/jammy loads of Merlot fruit w/ some
toasty oak; soft mouthfilling/ripe blackcurranty/Merlot
flavor; immense Merlot fruit but a tannic backbone that
will make aging a possibility; terrific red wine.
- Dyer
Diamond Mtn Cabernet '96: Dawnine Dyer was here representing
Chandon, so husband Bill Dyer accompanied her. Bill was
winemaker at Sterling where his Cabs tended to be on the
rather stiff/lean/hard side, but seemed to age pretty
well. This Cab, from fruit he & Dawnine grow in their
own vnyd up on DiamondMtn is not at all like that. Only
3 barrels worth, to their mailing list. Black color; intense
ripe/blackcurranty/Can some toasty/oak some dusty/earthy
DiamondMtn nose; big ripe/rich/tannic blackcurranty/Cab
some toasty/oak/ pungent flavor. Easily the best Bill
Dyer Cab I've ever had. There were a bunch of immenently
forgetable wines poured. The CanoeRidge GWT '99 was one
of the better US GWT's I've tried. The New ZacaMesa Viognier
'99 (their "super clone" Viognier, what used to be their
mis-identified Roussanne) was rich/full/floral/aromatic;
easily the best Viognier yet from ZacaMesa and better
than what they made from it as Roussanne. I retried the
Valley of the Moon Syrah '97 and still found it unthrilling;
rather bretty & unclean.
Dinner that night was with Mike Machado, a CyberSpace friend
from SanFrancisco, who has now become a RealSpace friend;
at Momentitas de la Vida down canyon in Arroyo Honda. The
company was high point of the evening. The food was good....
very good... but pretty pricey for waht it was. The wine
list very overpriced. Unlikely I'll bother to go back. The
wines was Domaine Les Pailleres Gigondas '98; nice southern
Rhone character w/ some earthiness, but on the light and
unthrilling side. Much too expensive at $48/btl.
RUSSIAN
RIVER PINOT NOIR
This
was a seminar/panel of Dick Phillips, Western Marketing
Director for Kenwood, and the winemaker for DeLoach and
the winemaker for Valley of the Moon, a sister winery under
Heck Estates (Korbel) to Kenwood. The wines displayed a
bit of the earthy/black cherry/cola character of RRV Pinot,
but were all fairly dominated by the toasty oak. Wines tasted:
DeLoach
OFS ("Our Finest Selection".... yashure!!) '97, '98, '99
Kenwood Pinot '97, '98, '99
Valley of the Moon Pinot '99
Notes
not worth transcribing. The DeLoach '99 OFS was my favorite
because it still had a lot of the black cherry fruit &
the oak was not so strong. The rest were all nice Pinots,
but just that.
One
of the things that came out of the panel discussion was
the widespread use of the Vinovation's reverse osmosis dealcoholization
of wine. One of the winemakers asserted that fully 15% of
SonomaCounty wine is subjected to this process. It's used
to knock off a % or two of the alcohol from high-alcohol
wines.
MARCHESE
DI GRESY TASTING
Marchese
Alberto di Gresy, on his first visit to NewMexico (he's
a skier, of course), did a seminar on his wines; primarily
Barbarescos from the Piemonte. He carries himself very much
like the aristocrat that he his, but is a very friendly
down-to-earth very entertaining guy. Speaks English but
w/ a pretty heavy Italian accent. I had had a few of his
wines over the yrs, but had never been knocked out by them.
These I were:
- Marchese
di Gresy Chardonnay '96: Med.gold color; light toasty/oak
beautiful/fragrant melong/Chard slight earthy nose; tart
earthy light melony/Chard slight metallic some minerally/stoney
flavor; lovely Chard with backbone & structure; a
bit of that stoney/ minerally character you get in Arneis,
but very fragrant Chard; lovely wine.
- Marchese
di Gresy Dolcetto d'Alba '99: Very dark color; deep
grapey/Dolcetto almost Syrah- like dusty bit walnutty
nose; hard/tannic tart very grapey/dusty loads of Dolcetto
fruit flavor; very long hard/tannic tart loads of Dolcetto
fruit finish; one of the best young Italian Dolcettos
I've had; needs food with it.
- Marchese
di Gresy Nebbiolo della Langhe '99: Med.dark color;
beautiful fragrant/floral/lilacs/ spicy/Nebbiolo slight
dusty nose; softer (but still tart/tannic/hard) fragrant/floral/lilacs/
perfumed/rose petal bit licorice lovely Nebbiolo flavor;
long hard/tannic floral Nebbiolo finish; loads of fruit
for a Nebbiolo but definitely that hard/tannic/austere
Nebbiolo backbone; classic Nebbiolo varietal character.
- Marchese
di Gresy Barbaresco Martinenga '95: Med.dark bit browning
color; pungent very licorice bit tarry/dried rose petal
spicy Nebbiolo nose; rather hard/tannic dried rose petal/tarry/
licorice/complex classic Barbaresco flavor; lovely aromatics
but hard/tannic on the palate.
- Marchese
di Gresy Barbaresco Gaiun '96: Dark color; deep lush
floral/lilacs very fruit- forward bit cedary/pencilly/Fr.oak
lots of Nebbiolo slight pungent/tarry nose; softer bit
more lush lilacs/floral/rose petal hard/tannic/astringent
flavor; more fruit & softer but still hard & tannic
on the palate.
- Marchese
di Gresy Moscato d'Asti '99: Med.yellow color; beautiful
very fragrant/grapey Muscat very floral almost orangey
nose; some sweet/frizzante lush/floral/Muscat flavor w/
slight tannic/bitterness in finish; essence of Muscat
fruit; lovely lovely wine. This was a terrific tasting.
The reds were all loaded w/ fruit and not aged to senility
like many Italian Nebbiolos. But they also had this hard/tart/tannic
character on the palate that cried out for fruit. A few
slices of dried salami and a handfull of fresh white truffles
would have added greatly to the appreciation of these
wines.
SHAFER
HILLSIDE SELECT VERTICAL
Doug
Shafer was here (he's pretty hard-core skier) to present
a vertical of his HillSide Select Cabernets. We tasted all
from '91 thru '96. The two that I had before in differing
contexts I had liked quite a bit. These were all the more
impressive; dynamite Cabernets. All made by essentially
the same winemaking techniques; all much too young. They
all had a strong dusty character that speaks of hillside
fruit and little of that soft underbelly I tend to associate
w/ Stag's Leap Cabernet. But trying to make subtle distinctions
betwixt these very young wines was arguing how many angels
can dance on the head of a pin. Of the 6 vintages, the '95
was my slight favorite for its riper character, more richness,
and greater complex/dusty/licorice character it showed.
It was near-impossible for me to pick out one as weaker
than all the rest. A terrific tasting; almost enough to
make me like Cabernet again.
DINNER
AT LAMBERTS
After
the Saturday seminars, 8 of us adjourned to Lambert's of
Taos for dinner. Joing two couples from my wine group was
Mike Machado again and Larry Archibald & Laura Chancellor.
Zeke Lanbert has easily one of the best restaurants in Taos
and a long-time friend for 12 yrs or so. His cusine can
be described as Contemporary American Cusine. He has one
of the best wine lists in NewMexico and both the food and
wine are very reasonably priced. The wines came from a case
that happened to appear on the restaurant's back doorstop
late in the afternoon:
- Qupe
Marsanne '94: Med.gold color; bit cabbagey/aspargras
complex hazelnutty/earthy bit oxidized/aged nose; tart/hard
bit cabaggey/herbal slight oxidized/nutty/toasted hazelnuts
complex flavor; showing a lot of aged character but interesting
wine I thought, especially with food.
- Qupe
Bien Nacido Cuvee (50% Viognier, 50% Chard) '94: Med.gold
color; rather oaked/toasty some floral/aromatic bit volatile
little Viognier nose; rather toasty/oaked slight volatile/
sharp/hot somewhat floral/aromatic slight Viognier flavor;
more like an aged Chard and little Viognier character
showing.
- Qupe
Viognier '94: Med.gold color; rather fragrant/floral/spicy/perfumed
bit volatile little oak nose; some bitter rather floral/spicy/aromatic
slight earthy/dusty flavor; interesting aged Viognier
but lacks the fresh/young Viognier character; interesting
wine. 4. Martinelli JackAssVnyd Zin (15.8%) '96: Med.dark
color; very strong toasty/pungent/oaked/ charred dusty
ripe blackberry/fruity very spicy nose; big/rich very
spicy/blackberry/Zin dusty rather charred/burnt/toasty/Fr.oaked
flavor; on release at ZAP, this was a very heavily/overwhelingly
oaked wine w/ a rather reduced/fecal/stinky character.
It seems to be coming out of it and the ripe Zin fruit
is starting to push through the oak; no overripe or late
harvest character at all, carries the alcohol well. Mike's
contribution to the evening.
- Albert
Bell Crozes-Hermitage Les Pierrelles '98: Med.dark
color; strong smoky/roasted/ espresso some blackberry/Syrah
lovely/complex nose; bit hard/tannic/angular/lean very
roasted/pungent/smokey/toasty light blackberry/green olive/Syrah
flavor; terrific Northern Rhone nose bit a bit lean/angular
on the palate right now; needs several yrs of age. Larry's
contribution to the evening.
- Edmunds
St. John Sonoma Valley Syrah Durrell Vnyd (13.3%) '91:
Dark color; strong peppery/smokey/ licorice/pungent bit
roasted/tarry blackberry/Syrah dusty complex nose; rich/intense
spicy/ peppery/pungent/toasty/toasted/smokey dusty blackberry/Syrah
flavor; a beautiful complex pungent/roasted Hermitage-like
Syrah that will still go on a number of yrs; classic Steve
Edmunds Syrah; beautiful wine.
- Baumard
LeVert de l'Or Specialite Vin Blanc Doux NV: Pale
yellow color; lovely floral/spicy/ aromatic/perfumed bit
earthy nose; slightly sweet (Auslese-level) earthy floral/aromatic/
perfumed quite grapey flavor; very interesting Auslese-like
wine w/ an intriguing floral character and a distinct
Loire/earthiness. 8. MontereyPeninsulaWnry Monterey JohannisbergRiesling
(16%) LateHarvest '79: Dark golden/brown color; some volatile
slight pickle juice loads of botrytis/peachy/apricotty
bit oxidized/ raisened complex nose; slightly sweet very
rich/oily/viscous tart slight pickle juice very intense
apricotty/peachy/botrytis some raisened slight oxidized
very complex flavor; very interesting/complex slight volatile
dessert wine; bit of heat from the alcohol.
Returned
to Taos on Monday afternoon for the second part of the Taos
WinterWineFestival:
DINNER
W/ ERIC & MARY BAUGHER
Eric
is winemaker at the Ridge MonteBello winery. I had met Eric
some 6-8 yrs ago on a visit up to The Ridge to see PaulDraper.
When I found out a few months ago he would be representing
Ridge at Taos, I suggest to LarryArchibald/LauraChancellor
that it would be neat to have Eric & family over for
dinner at L&L's cabin up in The Valley. They agreed
& so it happened. Joining us was Michael&Barbara
Ogg of SantaFe, co-owners of the cabin, and Eric & Mary.
Mary's Mom had come to Taos w/ them, so she stayed behind
to care for her two grandchildren. Larry ran into Mike Machado
at the previous tasting and so invited him to join us.
Laura's
5-course meal was, as usual, outstanding. Alas, the young,
single, handsome, virile male guy, usually no klutz in the
kitchen, badly muffed the appetizers. He did manage to salvage
his shredded reputation with a few decent wines. And Laura's
backup olives did much to salvage the app course. The wines:
- Fredreich
Willhelm Gymnasium (Karl Marx's school) Graacher Himmelreich
Riesling Auslese '76: Med.gold color; beautiful fragrant/complex/Mosel
valve oil/ bit earthy classic/perfumed/ aged Mosel nose;
off-dry beautiful complex/Mosel valve oil incredible/classic
flavor; very long/lingering perfumed/steely/Mosel valve
oil very complex bit steely finish; develops a bit of
oxidation the next morning; a terrific example of a classic
aged Mosel and still alive/vibrant and in good health.
- Donnhoff
Oberhausser Bruche Riesling Spatlese '99: Light gold
color; strong minerally/ pineapply/steely/earthy/metallic/austere
nose; tart/lean/hard metallic/minerally/stoney flavor;
off-dry lean/austere/tart minerally/pineapply/floral bit
earthy/floral finish; almost tastes halb-trocken; a classic
very young German Riesling that badly needs age; this
will probably go 15-30 yrs easily; one of the better young
Nahe wines I've had much in the Muller-Cattoir style.
- Ridge
Geyserville (68% Zin; 14.9%) '99: A barrel sample
that Eric brought that was to be poured the following
weekend at ZAP; very dark color; very strong deep blackberry/earthy/
peppery some buttery/oaked complex classic Geyserville
nose; rich very spicy very peppery blackberry complex/Geyserville/bit
funky/earthy light buttery/oak fairly extracted some hard/tannic
flavor; very long/lingering very peppery very spicy blackberry/earthy/funky
Geyserville finish w/ strong tannins; needs sever yrs
& will last 10; this struck me as the best young Geyserville
I've had from the '90's at this point in time; loaded
w/ classic Geyserville/spicy character; probably the longest
lived of the '90's Geyservilles; terrific wine & pleasure
to drink even this young.
- Ridge
Calif Zin Lytton Springs (80% Zin; 14.1%) '91: Another
bottle that Eric brought from the Ridge archives; dark
color; deep dust very fragrant very spicy/blackberry bit
smokey/pungent/ licorice/tobacco complex nose; tart bit
drying out pungent/smokey/peppery rather blackberry/ boysenberry
slight bretty complex flavor; very long pungent/smokey
complex some blackberry finish w/ light tannins; a rich
smooth lush very spicy Lytton at or slightly beyond its
peak; lacks some of that sweetness on the palate; great
example of what a mature Zin is like.
- Phelps
Eisele CabernetSauvignon (13.3%) '85: Very dark color;
some bretty pungent/tobaccoy/ smokey/menthol ripe blackcurranty/licorice/Cab
nose; big toasty/oak/pungent/charred Fr.oak dusty/blackcurranty/licorice/Cab
flavor; very long licorice/pungent/charred Fr.oak some
ripe/blackcurranty/Cab finish w/ some tannins; needs more
age; classic pungent Phelps Cab; the next day the nose
had become very perfumey/cheap perfume/gardenias/floral
in character but still a terrific Cab.
- Ridge
Calif CabernetSauvignon EiseleVnyd (13.9%) '71: Milt
Eisele offered these grapes from his young vnyd in '71
to Paul Draper and Ridge made their only version of this
wine. In its youth, it was a huge/black/tannic Cab and
way eclipsed the MonteBello '71 in intensity and character;
dark color; lovely/beautiful cedary/tobaccoy very fragrant
slight herbal some blackcurranty/Cab/fruit nose; soft/smooth/polished/elegant
very spicy/tobaccoy/cedary light Cab/blackcurranty slight
Kansas feed store balanced/elegant flavor; very long/lingering
strong cedary/tobaccoy/complex/smokey light blackcurranty/Cab
balanced finish w/ light tannins; terrific example of
fully mature Calif Cab; a bit drying out and a bit beyond
its peak but still plenty of Cab fruit and a real joy
to drink; one more btl left to share w/ Paul.
- Ridge
Calif MonteBello (12.2%) '71: Look at the alcohol
level on this sucker.... it would be hooted off the 'Net
in this day and age for being such an anemic Cab; very
dark color; slight bretty strong pungent/earthy/smokey/charred
bit Italianate slight herbal bit black cherry/Cab some
funky very complex nose; rich pungent/licorice/smokey/toasted/cedary/tobaccoy
smooth/ balanced bit black cherry/fruity earthy/dusty
very complex flavor; very long complex cedary/ tobaccoy/pungent
earthy/dusty bit bretty licorice/black cherry finish w/
light tannins; at or beyond its peak. This wine is EXACTLY
the concept of complexity that Paul seeks in his wines;
I really struggled to describe it. The Eisele was more
identifiable as mature Calif Cab, the MonteBello had a
lot of that typical MB funk to it, a bigger & less
mature wine, and much more interesting on the palate;
killer Cabernet.
- Diamond
Creek Volcanic Hill Cabernet Sauvignon (12 1/2%) '81:
Very dark color; strong toasty/ charred/burnt/Fr.oak very
dusty slight blackcurranty/Cab bit one-dimensional nose;
hard/tannic pungent/charred/toasty/burnt/Fr.oak slight
blackcurranty/Cab flavor; a bit short on fruit and a bit
dried out on the palate; still a big/huge wine but may
never come into balance w/ age; interesting to drink for
its power and toasty/oak.
- Ridge
Late Harvest Montebello '79: This is a wine Eric brought.
They found 100 cs of this wine, never before released,
never been labeled; and are preparing to release it for
sale. It was made from a block of Cabernet that got super-ripe
in 1979. Very dark/slightly browning color; quite raisened/late
harvesty/pruney some cedary/chocolaty/tobaccoy bit Italian/herbal
some LodiLate Hrvst/funky complex nose; slightly sweet
quite raisened/late harvesty/pruney interesting/ complex/cedary
very ripe some chocolaty flavor w/ light tannins; the
nose becomes much less pruney and more cedary/tobaccoy
on airing; not a lot of Cabernet character, more like
an aged LateHrvst Zin; lots of overripe/raisened character;
good complexity and very interesting wine.
- Ridge
Calif Petite Sirah Essence (SaH:32%; RS:10%; 14%) '86:
This is a wine Eric never even new existed. Very dark
color; very intense dusty/earthy peppery/black cherry
very grapey some cedary/tobaccoy complex nose; very intense
chocolaty/peppery/black cherry/cola very grapey some cedary/oaked
some complex somewhat sweet flavor; very long grapey/black
cherry/cola finish w/ some tannins; terrific Essence wine,
not much overripe/pruney/raisened character and developing
some complexity; still a ways to go.
All
in all, a terrific night of good grub, great wines, and
the most special of friends.
THERE'S
AN "R" IN ZINFANDEL
This
is the clever title Greg O'Byrne came up with for the Tuesday
afternoon seminar on single vnyd Zins of Rosenblum and Ridge.
Representing Ridge was, of, course, Eric Baugher... looking
none the worse for wear from the previous evening; one of
the recognized benefits of youth!! And for Rosenblum was
Kent Rosenblum himself; a pretty avid skier and doing his
second tour of duty at the Taos Wine Festival. They were
pouring four each single vnyd Zins from the '97 vintage.
They all showed extremely well and, though the wines were
old friends, the seminar was very informative.
- Rosenblum
Paso Robles Sauret Vnyd Zin '97: Med.color; fragrant
jammy/blackberry/ripe dusty nose; soft ripe lush jammy/blackberry/spicy
flavor; ready to drink, very tasty.
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Ridge Paso Robles Zin Dusi Vnyd Late Picked '97: Very
dark color; very ripe/very jammy/blackberry dusty/loads
of fruit very spicy/perfumed nose; big/intense ripe/blackberry/boysenberry/jammy
very spicy some dusty/old vines flavor; terrific drinking
Zin and still will age some.
- Rosenblum
Napa Vlly Lyons Vnyd Zin '97: Dark color; beautiful
lush blackberry/boysenberry/Zin dusty slight volatile
bit oaked nose; soft very lush licorice/blackberry/Zin
slight bretty flavor; really nice-drinking lush Zin
- Ridge
York Creek Napa Zin '97: Very dark color; deep earthy
some spicy/blackberry bit milky/oak nose; soft big light
blackberry dusty/earthy some Am.oaked/milky flavor; seems
shut down a bit; not a lot of fruit showing but pretty
big in the mouth; needs age.
- Rosenblum
Harris-Kratka Alexander Valley Zin '97: Med.dark color;
ripe cranberry/blackberry/Zin some earthy/AV bit oaked
nose; tart bright cranberry/raspberry/spicy light oak
flavor; drinking very well and near its peak.
- Rosenblum
Cullinane Vnyd Sonoma Zin '97: Very dark color; very
perfumed/fragrant/aromatic ripe jammy/raspberry/blackberry
nose; tart very aromatic/perfumed/high-toned bright cherry/
blackberry/cranberry flavor; a bright/vibrant very spicy
Zin.
- Ridge
LyttonSprings Zin '97: Dark color; deep/dusty rich
blackberry/boysenberry rather Am.oaked almost Aussie-Shiraz
nose; big/ripe blackberry/boysenberry/Zin very spicy dusty
some Am.oaked flavor; don't think I've ever had this LS
'97 taste so good.
- Ridge
Geyserville '97: Dark color; very strong raspberry/blackberry
some dusty/funky/Geyserville rather boysenberry/jammy
nose; tart carignane/black cherry dusty/earthy some blackberry/jammy
flavor w/ some tannins; will go another 4-6 yrs; best
this wine as tasted as well; one of the best of the Geyservilles
of the '90's. These wines all showed extremely well, something
that doesn't often happen in seminars like this. The Rosenblums
all had the classic Rosenblum lushness w/ only the Sauret
not likely to be destined for greater things. The Ridge
YorkCreek reminded me of some of the Ridge HowellMtn Zins;
not a lot of fruit & a certain earthy/dustiness to
it; it will mature into a very good Zin, however. The
Ridge YorkCreeks from the last few yrs have been the best
they've ever been.
CARNEROS
PINOTS
The
next seminar focused on Carneros Burgundy wines. Present
was Steve Leveque, Mondavi/Costal wnry in the Carneros;
Melissa Moravec of Casa Carneros (her & Kurt's wnry;
she's also winemaker for Carneros Creek, who will be bttlg
an Esola Zin very soon); and Axel Shug of Shug Estate. The
wines:
Mondavi/Costal
Carneros Chard '98: pleasant melony Chard; pleasant, but
just that.
- Shug
Carneros Chard '98: Lovely chard w/ a strong floral/pineapply
character much like
- Santa
Barbara Chards; good toasty/Fr.oak character; bit
on soft/fat side; lovely Chard Casa Carneros Pinot '96,
'97, '98: lots of bright cherry/black cherry character
w/ nice Burgundian/toasty/Fr.oak character; preferred
the '97; all very nicely made Pinots. Shug Carneros Pinot
'97, '98: more earthy, less fruit, strong charred/Fr.oak
component; preferred the '98 as being more exotic, though
lighter.
- Mondavi
Carneros Pinot '97: pleasant spicy oaked; nicely made
but unthrilling. None of these wines were particular knock-outs;
they don't seem to have much brightness of fruit. The
Casa Carneros were heads & shoulders above the rest,
thogh I did like the Shug '98. The Mondavis were.... well....
Mondavis; perfectly made, too perfect, w/o a lot of character.
PHELPS
INSIGNIA VERTICAL
Craig
Williams was here carrying the flag for Joseph Phelps. The
wines: Phelps Insignia '90, '91, '93, '94, '96, '97, '98,
'99 (barrel sample)
I didn't
take detailed tasting notes on these wines because, to tell
the truth, I couldn't find a whole lot of difference in
them. They were all big/huge/massive ripe Cabs displaying
that classic blackcurrantyCab and pungent/toasty/Fr.oak
to them. I've not a clue as to which ones(s) will evolve
the best. The famed '97 seemed more balanced & less
extracted than the others and was not my favorite. The '91
I preferred slightly more for the greater perfume it had
and, perhaps, more structure for the long haul.
Though
I didn't take notes, I thought the wines were all stunning.
Best of all, Craig gave a very informative presentation
of the wines and description of the vagaries of each vintage.
As he focuses more and more on the vnyd source for these
wines; it's clear the Phelps Insignias are only going to
get better, barring a disaster in the weather.
Bid
adeau to Mike, Craig, Greg, and Josh (Jensen); head on down-valley;
stop for a very good/hearty meal at The Trading Post, and
back on home to the real world.
TomHill
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And
a bit of the old bloody pulpit:
|
-
Nebbiolo: This is a variety that I am incredibly impressed
with. It has incredible perfume and aromatics when it has
the fruit there in the wine. With the aging, in barrel or
in bottle, it develops terrific complexities (no news here
to the Italian wine-loving contingent). But it's that tarry/aromatic/floral
fruit that I like so much and the Italian Barolo/Barbaresco
makers seem intent on destroying. The problem is that it's
an acid wine with this hard/tannic/astringent backbone that
makes it hard to drink for us with a Calif- centric palate
and use to that ripe lushness you get from those wines.
If they could get that Nebbiolo varietal fruit in Calif
and blend in something like Petite to soften on the palate,
are coferment w/ Syrah or Zin to compliment the aromatics
(but not obliterate them) and achieve palate softnes. you'd
have one killer of a wine, a wine the Italians would be
very envious of. Alas, that Nebbiolo fruit has not yet been
achieved in Calif.
-
Qupe Whites: All three of the '94 Qupes I found rather interesting
in character; what I refer to as "intellectual experiences"
rather than "sensual experiences". Less open minds would
refer to them as "crap". The Marsanne was the least attractive
of the trio, but, still, I found some pleasure in drinking
it with the food. The Cuvee seemed simply like an older
Chard, and the Viognier was probably the most attractive
and pleasurable of the bunch.
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Marsanne: The Qupe Marsanne is easily the best varietal
Marsanne produced in Calif. It is not a particularly attractive
wine when young; more like a simple/appley/Chard in character.
But, with age, it can oftentimes take on an inteesting/intriguing
aged/slightly oxidized/ nutty/hazelnutty/earthy character
not at all unlike aged Hermitage and Chateauneuf Blancs.
Because few people have much experiences with this style
of wine and it is rather an aquired taste, and the wines
lack that fruit-forward character of much younger wines;
this style of wine is not greatly appreciated. I'm learning
I shouldn't inflict my "intellectual experiences" on others.
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MontereyPeninsula TBA: This wine, on it's release, was incredibly
intense botrytis/apricotty very syrupy dessert wine. Like
many ultra-sweet wines, this as aged quite well, I thought.
A bit of weird things are starting to come out in the wine,
but by and large it's a very pleasurable/interesting wine
to drink in addition to being an "intellectual experience".
5. Baumard Vert de l'Or: "And what be this wine??" I thought
when I saw it on the shelf of Bravo up in Taos, so bought
a btl to try. "And what be this wine??" I thought when I
drank it. It definitely had some of the Loire earthy/chalky
character to it but was distinctly lacking in that perfumed/floral
CheninBlanc character of Baumard's wines. So some of the
best minds in science went to work on the problem!! Back
around the turn of the last century, around 1910 (and, NO!!!
I was NOT there at the time!!), some Verdelho was broughht
into the Loire from Portugal for some unknown reason and
planted. It, apparently, has much the same growing characteristics
of Chenin and some assert the varieties may be one in the
same. The French wine authorities have recently become aware
that this outlaw variety exists in the Loire and have been
making an effort to eradicate it. It is NOT legal (as if
THAT makes any difference to the French winemakers!) to
make AppellationControlee Loire wine from the variety. Baumard
has a small block of this Verdehlo located in the heart
of his St.Catherine vnyd in the Coteaux de Layon. This wine
is a late harvest (little botrytis evident to me) wine made
from those grapes. The "Vert de l'Or" (Green of the Gold)
is a play on the Verdehlo variety name. The label has a
drawing of one of those Porto dingey-thingeys, with Porto
barriques on the deck, that used to haul Porto down the
Douro river. The wine is only identified on the label as
"Product of France", but the Baumard address on the strip
label is a dead give-away. I was sure the wine was not CheninBlanc
but damned if I could figure out what it was; not being
sufficiently familar w/ Verdehlo varietal character. So
now you know the rest of the story. An "intellectual experience"
that turned out OK.
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CyberSpace & RealSpace: I spend too much time in CyberrSpace
but RealSpace is where I do spend most of my time. I have
genuinely enjoyed the contact with people in RealSpace that
I've first met in CyberrSpace. This time was no exception.
Mike Machado first contacted me several weeks ago after
reading my post on the coming Taos Winter Wine Festival
from 3-4 months ago on WLDG. He was interested in taking
an intense week-long Taos ski program to upgrade his skiing
skills. The opportunity to combine that passion with his
wine passion was much too much to resist. So he contacted
me in CyberSpace about his plans to come out and wanted
to get together. So we did. I trust he enjoyed the opportunity
to meet some of the NewMexico wine folk as much as I enjoyed
having him join us all for dinner. It was nice to have someone
at dinner who was not continually making fun of my age,
or my educational experiences, or LBD's wet spot on my bare
leg!!
TomHill
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