Jeff Grossman
Jeff Grossman
At home. I think this is the last of the Pandemic Era 'at home' notes.
There was, of course, easily half a case of Brun FRV100 consumed as well... April is the birthday month.
Dom. de Bois D'Yver 2017 Chablis - by the book Villages (or Petit?), good if the price is right
Falkenstein 2019 Niedermenniger Herrenberg Riesling Spatlese Feinherb AP 3 "Palm" - limey, juicy, pure and pretty, skimpy texture though
Proprieta Sperino 2020 Rosato "Rosa del Rosa" - 13%, a transparent and pale pink, this is cherries and a bit of peach, but not at all sweet, I'd call it tangy rather than say it has cut but it was crisp enough to handle avocados and sardines, a good wine to drink cold on a warm day
Foillard 2019 Beaujolais-Villages - this is really quite a nice quaff: not sweet, not spirity, a lot of berries and a little earth, medium-weight at most, this could be a house wine fairly easily (...if it were half the price)
Breton 2015 Bourgueil "Nuits d'Ivresse" - 13%, Day 1: yup, that's Loire franc, sturdy tannins over a relatively delicate flavor palate, warm year but this is not strongly affected (e.g., sweet, jammy, low-acid); Day 3: funny, it has a big, big nose of green peppers - and a little shoe polish - but the mouth is medium-weight (at most!) with the usual darkberry flavors jazzed-up by a sliver of orange peel, good and vivid finish (maybe 30 seconds or more)
Dom. De Belliviere 2015 Coteaux du Loir "Le Rouge-Gorge" - recognizably this wine and this grape, a little richer than usual, tastes as if a little bit of ripe gamay was mixed in (it wasn't), great stuff
Jadot 2010 Pernand-Vergelesses "Clos de la Croix de Pierre" - no note?
Jasmin 2006 Cote-Rotie - cough syrupy, needs waking up; Day 3: better but either still sleepy or just a tad tired
Produttori del Barbaresco 2006 Barbaresco - much better than the last bottle, earthy, spicy, achingly dry; with air, intensely cran-cherry, perfect remaining acidity and just enough tannic grip to remind you that This Is Wine
La Cantina di Cuneaz Nadir 2018 Valee d'Aoste Rouge "Les Goesses" - Day 1: inky look, blackberries and saddle leather; Day 2: this has unclenched a lot, still blackberry flavor but a lot lighter, no detectable brett, a whiff of roses and minerals, shame there isn't any left for Day 3
Fattoria Colleallodole Milziade Antano Eredi 2006 Montefalco DOCG Sagrantino - 15%(!), blue-black flavors, strong proofage but does not show it especially much, clean, still purple-black, good acidity but not barbed-wire, kinda liking this (for strong proofage wine), the winemaker's profile is branded on the cork (isn't that a tad prideful?)
Monte Bernardi 2017 Chianti Classico Riserva - textbook Chianti, maybe a little extra bosky raspberry to go with the cherry, if I'm not careful I'll drink this whole thing in one sitting; Day 3: maybe lost a little of its acidity, and showed a quick whiff of something minty/eucalyptusy, but mostly the same
d'Angelo 2007 Aglianico di Vulture Riserva - very faintly corked, big and tannic but no "bold" and no fruit, drat; Day 3: more obvious
Cameron 2011 Pinot Noir "Arley's Leap" - nice balance of austere and funky, but viciously reduced; Day 3: still reduced! I slip a penny in... and swirl... it is very slightly better, perhaps; strong red fruits (strawberry, raspberry) over a still-tannic base, acidity good, dry dry dry, last glass is best
Kelley Fox Wines 2013 Pinot Noir, Momtazi Vineyard - finally, one that isn't too young! drinks with grace and beauty and a bit of tangy wet earth; Day 3: fabulous, entrancing nose of sweet black cherry and tangy, bitter iodine; it has gained weight and texture (made it all the way to 'mid-weight'!); there is also a whiff of fruit-drink powder (SweeTARTS?) and something like spinach roots (water and iron and mud and antioxidants); love it
Ch. Climens 2015 Barsac "Cypre(grave)s de Climens" - 375ml; confusingly, the front label says both "Barsac" and "Grand Vin de Sauternes"; back label gives the AOC; anyway, this is rather nice: lots of botrytis, acceptable acidic vim, and it's neither overwhelmingly oaky nor dizzyingly sweet, a few small tartaric crystals in the bottom of my glass, quite happy to have this with some foie gras one day and as dessert on its own a week later
Graham's 2000 Vintage Port - just about perfect, the extra-sweet style has receded a bit and brought balance
There was, of course, easily half a case of Brun FRV100 consumed as well... April is the birthday month.
Dom. de Bois D'Yver 2017 Chablis - by the book Villages (or Petit?), good if the price is right
Falkenstein 2019 Niedermenniger Herrenberg Riesling Spatlese Feinherb AP 3 "Palm" - limey, juicy, pure and pretty, skimpy texture though
Proprieta Sperino 2020 Rosato "Rosa del Rosa" - 13%, a transparent and pale pink, this is cherries and a bit of peach, but not at all sweet, I'd call it tangy rather than say it has cut but it was crisp enough to handle avocados and sardines, a good wine to drink cold on a warm day
Foillard 2019 Beaujolais-Villages - this is really quite a nice quaff: not sweet, not spirity, a lot of berries and a little earth, medium-weight at most, this could be a house wine fairly easily (...if it were half the price)
Breton 2015 Bourgueil "Nuits d'Ivresse" - 13%, Day 1: yup, that's Loire franc, sturdy tannins over a relatively delicate flavor palate, warm year but this is not strongly affected (e.g., sweet, jammy, low-acid); Day 3: funny, it has a big, big nose of green peppers - and a little shoe polish - but the mouth is medium-weight (at most!) with the usual darkberry flavors jazzed-up by a sliver of orange peel, good and vivid finish (maybe 30 seconds or more)
Dom. De Belliviere 2015 Coteaux du Loir "Le Rouge-Gorge" - recognizably this wine and this grape, a little richer than usual, tastes as if a little bit of ripe gamay was mixed in (it wasn't), great stuff
Jadot 2010 Pernand-Vergelesses "Clos de la Croix de Pierre" - no note?
Jasmin 2006 Cote-Rotie - cough syrupy, needs waking up; Day 3: better but either still sleepy or just a tad tired
Produttori del Barbaresco 2006 Barbaresco - much better than the last bottle, earthy, spicy, achingly dry; with air, intensely cran-cherry, perfect remaining acidity and just enough tannic grip to remind you that This Is Wine
La Cantina di Cuneaz Nadir 2018 Valee d'Aoste Rouge "Les Goesses" - Day 1: inky look, blackberries and saddle leather; Day 2: this has unclenched a lot, still blackberry flavor but a lot lighter, no detectable brett, a whiff of roses and minerals, shame there isn't any left for Day 3
Fattoria Colleallodole Milziade Antano Eredi 2006 Montefalco DOCG Sagrantino - 15%(!), blue-black flavors, strong proofage but does not show it especially much, clean, still purple-black, good acidity but not barbed-wire, kinda liking this (for strong proofage wine), the winemaker's profile is branded on the cork (isn't that a tad prideful?)
Monte Bernardi 2017 Chianti Classico Riserva - textbook Chianti, maybe a little extra bosky raspberry to go with the cherry, if I'm not careful I'll drink this whole thing in one sitting; Day 3: maybe lost a little of its acidity, and showed a quick whiff of something minty/eucalyptusy, but mostly the same
d'Angelo 2007 Aglianico di Vulture Riserva - very faintly corked, big and tannic but no "bold" and no fruit, drat; Day 3: more obvious
Cameron 2011 Pinot Noir "Arley's Leap" - nice balance of austere and funky, but viciously reduced; Day 3: still reduced! I slip a penny in... and swirl... it is very slightly better, perhaps; strong red fruits (strawberry, raspberry) over a still-tannic base, acidity good, dry dry dry, last glass is best
Kelley Fox Wines 2013 Pinot Noir, Momtazi Vineyard - finally, one that isn't too young! drinks with grace and beauty and a bit of tangy wet earth; Day 3: fabulous, entrancing nose of sweet black cherry and tangy, bitter iodine; it has gained weight and texture (made it all the way to 'mid-weight'!); there is also a whiff of fruit-drink powder (SweeTARTS?) and something like spinach roots (water and iron and mud and antioxidants); love it
Ch. Climens 2015 Barsac "Cypre(grave)s de Climens" - 375ml; confusingly, the front label says both "Barsac" and "Grand Vin de Sauternes"; back label gives the AOC; anyway, this is rather nice: lots of botrytis, acceptable acidic vim, and it's neither overwhelmingly oaky nor dizzyingly sweet, a few small tartaric crystals in the bottom of my glass, quite happy to have this with some foie gras one day and as dessert on its own a week later
Graham's 2000 Vintage Port - just about perfect, the extra-sweet style has receded a bit and brought balance