Jeff Grossman
Jeff Grossman
It is Thursday, the service before the last service. Racines is busy, in that bon voyage way, its community of geeks stopping by for one last taste. The fellow at the table next to us is up from DC; Lee Campbell is here; and many others.
Sasha and I aim for seats at the bar but end up at a table; there are worse fates.
We ask for pours of, well, anything they recommend. You know how it is.
David Lillie pours:
De Moor 2015 Saint-Bris "Sans Bruit" - the price of fame: CSW used to get several cases of De Moor wine every year but now they only get 6 bottles; pretty wine, clean, crisp without forward acids, it's Chablis-ish but with a bit more fruit and a bit less seashells
Chidaine 2019 Montlouis "Les Bournais" - beautiful wine, all the edges folded and tucked, maybe 8-10g rs makes it even more velvety
Pascaline's selections:
Bertin-Delatte 2018 VdF "Vingt Neuf" - from vines planted in 1929, chenin on schist, not limestone; the bouquet is graceful and hypnotic and demure; the palate is not so deep as it is from the usual (limestone) places but the acidity is just as firm, perhaps with slightly better manners; with air, the palate develops a slightly bitter, stony, flinty edge (hints at sulfurous) but the acidity plays guardrail and this train never goes off the tracks; over several hours the acidity and the flinty-ness both recede a bit; this will not displace Huet or Foreau or Pinon in my affections but it is an interesting version of dry chenin blanc
Occhipinti 2009 IGT "Il Frappato" - lurid, turbid magenta; this is amazing, fresh and wild, the texture has thinned but the flavor intensity is totally unchained, .sasha calls 'old Burgundy flavors' but with incredible shape, wow
Mac Forbes 2013 Pinot Noir, Woori Yallock, Yarra Valley - Pascaline conceals the bottle... OK, here goes: it's all mineral and structure, .sasha gets a hint of autumnal fruit, I'm pretty sure this is not from one of the regular desinations in France (Bordeaux, Burgundy, Loire, Rhone), .sasha says it has the taste of a southern climate but not the weight, but neither of us can imagine grenache or mourvedre tasting like this so maybe Corsica?, in any case it has some age on it; Pascaline reveals it to be anecdotal pinot noir (only 264 bottles made), Woori Yallock is a vineyard high above Yarra Valley

After 7 years, we must say au revoir to Racines NY and await whatever French phoenix takes its place.
(After Pascaline finishes her book!)
Sasha and I aim for seats at the bar but end up at a table; there are worse fates.
We ask for pours of, well, anything they recommend. You know how it is.
David Lillie pours:
De Moor 2015 Saint-Bris "Sans Bruit" - the price of fame: CSW used to get several cases of De Moor wine every year but now they only get 6 bottles; pretty wine, clean, crisp without forward acids, it's Chablis-ish but with a bit more fruit and a bit less seashells
Chidaine 2019 Montlouis "Les Bournais" - beautiful wine, all the edges folded and tucked, maybe 8-10g rs makes it even more velvety
Pascaline's selections:
Bertin-Delatte 2018 VdF "Vingt Neuf" - from vines planted in 1929, chenin on schist, not limestone; the bouquet is graceful and hypnotic and demure; the palate is not so deep as it is from the usual (limestone) places but the acidity is just as firm, perhaps with slightly better manners; with air, the palate develops a slightly bitter, stony, flinty edge (hints at sulfurous) but the acidity plays guardrail and this train never goes off the tracks; over several hours the acidity and the flinty-ness both recede a bit; this will not displace Huet or Foreau or Pinon in my affections but it is an interesting version of dry chenin blanc
Occhipinti 2009 IGT "Il Frappato" - lurid, turbid magenta; this is amazing, fresh and wild, the texture has thinned but the flavor intensity is totally unchained, .sasha calls 'old Burgundy flavors' but with incredible shape, wow
Mac Forbes 2013 Pinot Noir, Woori Yallock, Yarra Valley - Pascaline conceals the bottle... OK, here goes: it's all mineral and structure, .sasha gets a hint of autumnal fruit, I'm pretty sure this is not from one of the regular desinations in France (Bordeaux, Burgundy, Loire, Rhone), .sasha says it has the taste of a southern climate but not the weight, but neither of us can imagine grenache or mourvedre tasting like this so maybe Corsica?, in any case it has some age on it; Pascaline reveals it to be anecdotal pinot noir (only 264 bottles made), Woori Yallock is a vineyard high above Yarra Valley
After 7 years, we must say au revoir to Racines NY and await whatever French phoenix takes its place.
(After Pascaline finishes her book!)