CWD: What did you drink last night (or whenever)?

2021 is the driest Lauer Senior I can recall. An ethereal floral nose and elegant palate presentation, yet built for some cellar time. Bravo!

210B1253-A9FA-4E85-9702-6612B051A71C.jpg
 
originally posted by Jayson Cohen:
2021 is the driest Lauer Senior I can recall. An ethereal floral nose and elegant palate presentation, yet built for some cellar time. Bravo!

210B1253-A9FA-4E85-9702-6612B051A71C.jpg

Hi Jayson, I was wondering whether you found the '21 Lauer more approachable than previous vintages?

When I had it, I felt the Senior did not take too much time to open up and hit its stride. I'm wondering whether the "ripe acid" profile of '21 may have made the '21 Senior more approachable than usual.
 
originally posted by Yule Kim:
originally posted by Jayson Cohen:
2021 is the driest Lauer Senior I can recall. An ethereal floral nose and elegant palate presentation, yet built for some cellar time. Bravo!

210B1253-A9FA-4E85-9702-6612B051A71C.jpg

Hi Jayson, I was wondering whether you found the '21 Lauer more approachable than previous vintages?

When I had it, I felt the Senior did not take too much time to open up and hit its stride. I'm wondering whether the "ripe acid" profile of '21 may have made the '21 Senior more approachable than usual.

Yeah. It is both leaner seeming and showing more on pop and pour compared to my experience that the bottling usually needs a year or so to settle. I will see tomorrow if there’s any overnight development.
 
originally posted by Jayson Cohen:
originally posted by Yule Kim:
originally posted by Jayson Cohen:
2021 is the driest Lauer Senior I can recall. An ethereal floral nose and elegant palate presentation, yet built for some cellar time. Bravo!

Hi Jayson, I was wondering whether you found the '21 Lauer more approachable than previous vintages?

When I had it, I felt the Senior did not take too much time to open up and hit its stride. I'm wondering whether the "ripe acid" profile of '21 may have made the '21 Senior more approachable than usual.

Yeah. It is both leaner seeming and showing more on pop and pour compared to my experience that the bottling usually needs a year or so to settle. I will see tomorrow if there’s any overnight development.

Thank you. It will be interesting to hear your thoughts about the wine's development.

From what I tasted over 4 days, it definitely made me intrigued about the '21 Senior's potential.
 
1982 Calera Selleck Vineyard Pinot Noir: Pristine bottle recently released from the winery's library after Josh Jensen's death. A remarkable older California Pinot Noir. Showed significant stem inclusion, red fruit, spice (stem, not oak), and wonderful bottle sweetness. Easily the most memorable Calera I've had.

1981 Calera Selleck Vineyard Pinot Noir: Another pristine bottle from the recent library release. Darker and burlier than the 1982. I think there may have been a bit of brett. Altogether more rustic and a lesser wine than the 1982. On its own, though, it would have presented as nice, but not great, older California Pinot Noir.
 
Domaine Rene Engel Clos de Vougeot Grand Cru '01 -- Double decanting showed lots of sediment, solid red, full and generous bouquet, likewise on palate with all the right components in balance, nice length, probably near its peak, absolutely nothing to quibble about with this trophy. [E]

Glad I didn't check Wine Searcher before I pulled it as the average price was way higher than I expected for a 2001.

Superb with medallion of duck foie gras, then veal sweetbread/kidneys/quenelle/porcini mushroom in puff pasty. And it wasn't shabby with the chocolate and black currant mousse cake. All from the kitchen of restaurateurs Chef Georges and Monique Guy.

. . . . . . . Pete
 
"Glad I didn't check Wine Searcher before I pulled it as the average price was way higher than I expected for a 2001."

buy you weren't paying for it, right? likely you bought it a long time ago.

if you buy a young wine for consumption at a later date because that is when it will be lovely, then (unless poverty is an issue) whatever its "market value" is is when you consume it is moot and irrelevant.
 
We all know that for the overwhelming majority of his reds, the conclusion is "Drink or Hold". Not this one. It's a "Drink". Another ESJ collector suggested drinking it now so I grabbed my lone bottle. It was sublime.

IMG-3839-4.jpg
 
Opened my second and last bottle of the 2017 Edmunds St John El Jaleo. Holy cats, was it good! Weightless but potent, silky smooth with zippy acidity and an abundance of red cherry fruit. It was more-ish and a fine accompaniment to a dinner of venison loin after a 10-hour drive back after dropping our son off at college.

Mark Lipton
 
originally posted by Rahsaan:
originally posted by MLipton:
.... after dropping our son off at college.

Mark Lipton

Wow. The nests are emptied!

Yup, it happens. Consider that you and I met for the first time shortly after he was born. Tempus fugit, man.

Mark Lipton
 
Mark, et al.,

I didn't say much about it at the time the '17 El Jaléo was released, but I bottled a little over a dozen cases of magnums, and still have most of them (in case anyone is interested).

Steve
 
originally posted by Pavel Tchichikov:
originally posted by Steve Edmunds:
nice leftovers!

actually there were some leftovers the day after, but mysteriously all the lobster had disappeared, as did the contents of that bottle

Had the 2010 LdH Tondonia Blanco Riserva last week. Young, obviously, but very delicious in that phase of its evolution. I don't regret opening it, but would keep other bottles for another 10+.
 
originally posted by Jim Hanlon:
Had the 2010 LdH Tondonia Blanco Riserva last week. Young, obviously, but very delicious in that phase of its evolution. I don't regret opening it, but would keep other bottles for another 10+.

no depiction of accompanying leftovers?

are they rushing them out the door a little sooner these days, or do they release the vintages of the riserva blanco out of order when warranted? I could be mistaken but it seemed the '91 showed up around its 20th birthday if not later.
 
originally posted by Pavel Tchichikov:
originally posted by Jim Hanlon:
Had the 2010 LdH Tondonia Blanco Riserva last week. Young, obviously, but very delicious in that phase of its evolution. I don't regret opening it, but would keep other bottles for another 10+.

no depiction of accompanying leftovers?

are they rushing them out the door a little sooner these days, or do they release the vintages of the riserva blanco out of order when warranted? I could be mistaken but it seemed the '91 showed up around its 20th birthday if not later.

I'm no LdH expert, but you may be thinking of the Gran Riserva Blanco. Current release there is 2001.

Honestly, I can't even remember what I ate with it. It definitely wasn't such an impressive paella. But I remember the wine!
 
Back
Top