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.
|
Morgante Don Antonio
Nero d'Avola IGT
- July 27, 2001
|
Tasted
ths wine last night after a foil tournament in SantaFe (knocked
out by this cute little 14 yr old girl... not good for the
ego!!):
- Morgante
Don Antonio Nero d'Avola IGT (14%) 1998: Very dark color;
rather Fr.oaked very lush/fragrant/perfumed spicy/licorice/boysenberry
nose; soft/rich/lush/jammy rather Fr.oaked lush/ripe/boysenberry/licorice/grapey
mouthfilling flavor; very long grapey/licorice/boysenberry
rather toasty/Fr.oaked finish w/ a hard/tannic aftertaste;
some like a grapey Dolcetto, much like a ripe PasoRobles/jammy
Zin; a very/clean lush/ripe red; $48 on the Pranzo wine
list.
|
And
a bitty little bloody pulpit:
|
-
Nero d'Alva: One of the indigenous/native varieties to Southern
Italy, the few examples I've tried seemed rough & rustic,
coarse; not anything to recommend for the variety. A friend
planting a vineyard west of Buellton expressed an interest
in this variety so that I'd try another one. This one was
mightly impressive and showed very competent winemaking.
It reminded me some of a jammy Paso Zin, some of Dolcetto,
much of Refosco or Toreldego. Seems to me a variety very
much worth exploring in Calif where, of course, it would
put any Italian versions to shame.
-
Style: I would have to describe this wine as very much in
an international/Parkerized style of winemaking. It did
not have much of the hot/climate/bretty/barnyardy/goat pen
character f many of the Sicilian reds I've tried. Therefore,
my intellect tells me I should not like this wine as it's
not representative of traditional Sicilian wines. Alas,
I loved the stuff.
TomHill
(still licking his wounds from last night)
|
|