|
|
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.
|
Taos Dinner w/Bob Lindquist - January 29, 2002
|
- Qupe
Marsanne (Ibarra-Young Marsanne, Stolpman Roussanne) 2000:
Light yellow color; clean/crisp appley/floral simple/Marsanne
nose; tart/crisp clean appley bright Marsanne no oak flavor;
young and needs age to show much; classic underwhelming
young Marsanne.
- Qupe
Marsanne 1995: Med.dark gold color; strong nutty bit
oxidized some fragrant/floral/ honeysuckle some complex
nose; tart nutty/hazelnutty slight oxidized some floral/
honeysuckle complex flavor; seems pretty typical aged Marsanne
but maybe a bit old before its time.
- Qupe
Marsanne 1994: Med.gold color; lovely complex smokey/pungent
slight herbal almost SB-like light oaked nose; soft/smooth/round
lush elegant bit herbal smokey/pungent quite complex
flavor; fully mature lovely/elegant/complex Marsanne.
- Qupe
Roussanne Bien Nacido Vineyard 2000: Very strong/fragrant/perfumed
light Fr.oak slight volatile lift rather aromatic/floral
nose; soft/lush some Fr.oaked rich/lush/floral/ spicy flavor;
very nicely made lovely Roussanne.
- Qupe
Central Coast Syrah 2000: Dark color; bit funky/pungent/Rhonish
light blackberry/ Syrah quite interesting nose; soft spicy/funky/earthy/Rhonish
light blackberry/Syrah flavor w/ light tannins; really starting
to show nicely now; great/easy drinking.
- Qupe
Bien Nacido Reserve Syrah 1999: Very dark color; strong
smokey/pungent mocha/Fr.oaked toasty rather spicy/blackberry/Syrah
perfumed nose; tart bit hard/lean mocha/toasty/Fr.oak/ smokey
pungent loads of blackberry/Syrah fruit flavor; not the
bright/lush Syrah/fruit wine that I remember a few months
ago; seems a bit hard & closed right now.
- Qupe
Bien Nacido Hillside Reserve Syrah 1997: Very dark color;
beautiful/intense pungent/ gamey/mocha/roasted complex some
blackberry/boysenberry/Syrah fragrant nose; soft very lush
smokey/pungent/roasted/toasted gamey/Syrah/blackberry slight
charred/green olive quite complex flavor w/ some tannins;
still can use a yr or two. Haven't had this in well over
a year and it's really a beautiful Syrah now.
- Qupe
Bien Nacido Reserve Syrah 1994: Very dark color; intense
blackberry/boysenberry smokey/dusty/pungent bit roasted/espresso/NorthernRhone
complex; beautiful rich/smokey/ pungent/charred/Fr.oak some
roasted/mocha very strong blackberry/Syrah bit gamey rather
complex smooth/round flavor; tasting really beautifully
now and probably near its peak.
|
-
Bob was hosting a winemaker dinner at DocMartin's restaurant
at the TaosInn. It's a restaurant I've always enjoyed over
the years and one that has one of the better wine lists
in NewMexico. Chef Scott Radek's menu was: Assorted Hor
d'Oeuvres Butter Poached Petite Lobster Tail w/ Lemon Sabayon
on Basil Ravioli Cassoulet of Duck w/ Seared Duck Breast
and FoieGras Sausage Mixed Greens w/ Pear & Pomengranate
Seeds Colorado Double Lamb Chop w/ Roasted Vegetables, Polenta,
& Balsamic Jus Apple Tart Tatin The menu was particularly
well-executed, especially the Lobster and the lamb. The
Roussanne and the lobster were probably the best match of
the evening.
-
Marsanne: Bob's Marsannes are always pretty underwhelming
upon their release and show a lot of simple/appley character.
This is a wine that badly needs some age on it to show the
complexity of which it is capable. The '95 was pretty much
what I've come to expect in fully mature Marsanne; a slightly
hazelnutty near-oxidized character that a lot of people
don't particularly like. The people at my table pretty much
dismissed as a too-old/oxidized white wine. I liked it quite
a bit, but thought it a bit further along than I expected
of a '9However, the '94 was probably about the best mature
Marsanne I've ever had. It had a slightly herbal character
that I'd never found in them before, a roundness & lushness
on the palate, and a wonderful complexity. Beautiful wine.
-
Roussanne: Bob makes two Roussannes, a Bien Nacido
Vineyard version and an Alban Vineyard one. They are
sorta betwixt his Chard and his Marsannes. Lovely aromatics
w/ a slight touch of Fr.oak and a slight volatile lift to
them. I like his Chards a lot, but often find them w/ a
pretty hefty dose of oak and sometimes a little volatile.
The Alban Roussanne though, is almost always my favorite;
with a steely backbone to it that the Bien Nacido somewhat
lacks.
-
Central Coast Syrah 2000: I remember when I tasted this
on its debut tasting at the SantaFe Wine&Chile Fiesta
in September and proclaiming it the lightest/weakest most
ordinary Central Coast Syrah Bob has yet made. Tasted a
month later, I was still very unimpressed with it. But,
tonight, it was really tasting wonderful and had put on
considerable weight since last September. Bob thinks it's
one of his better Central Coast Syrahs, but I'm not sure
I agree (yet) on that one. The wine contains a little Lodi
old vine Carignane and Zin and a shot of far-EastSidePaso
French Camp Syrah. This gives the wine a certain earthy/funky
character that resembles a lot a better Cotes-du-Rhone.
I liked it a lot better in the early '90's when I thought
it had more Santa Barbara Syrah in it and more of an expression
of pure Syrah. So it's changed some over the yrs. It is
probably one of my most favorite restaurant wines I order
and, because it comes often in half btls, I probably drink
over 10-15 btls in restaurants over a year's time. But I
never ceased to be amazed on how this wine seems to put
on weight from its release every year at SFW&CF.
-
Bien Nacido Reserve Syrah: This is another wine that seems
to put on weight with age. Both of these tonight were nowhere
near the lightweights I remember when I first tasted them
upon release.
-
Mocha character: One of the techniques Bob uses in his Hillside
Syrah is to saignee some of the juice off early on and put
it into new Francois Freres barrels. I once tasted this
in Paso and it showed an overwhelming mocha.coffee character.
Some of this is then blended back into the Hillside Syrah
to give it the additional complexity of that mocha/coffee
character. The rest goes into the regular Reserve Bien Nacido
or the Central Coast.
All
in all, a really wonderful evening with great wines and special
friends.
TomHill
|
|
|
Copyright
© 1996 - 2006, Tom Hill - All rights reserved
No original material may be reproduced without written consent
Mail & Comments
- Grape-Nutz
|
|
|