Jay Miller
Jay Miller
Condolences on your loss
originally posted by Jim Hanlon:
originally posted by Brézème:
Based in which village?
There is no Moulin à vent village. The cru is shared by Romanèches Thorin and Chénas.
Thillardon or Rottiers might be what you are looking for.
I think the wines are true to their terroir, without the sophistication of some of the best wines made by some Macon or Fleurie vignerons (a sign of transparency in my mind).
Chateau des Jacques is one of the most unbojo beaujolais that I have tried. Like most of the beaujolais wines made by Bourguignons driving down.
Thanks, Eric (and BJ). Maybe I've already found my MaV in Roilette and Brun. I will revisit Thillardon and Rottiers.
originally posted by Jim Hanlon:
I generally shy away from Carignan as a lead grape and I don't buy much at all from the Roussillon.
originally posted by Pavel Tchichikov:
out of '13 dolde here, but have the '14 - does that mean I need to wait exactly one year? :-)
all hail bruno debize
originally posted by MLipton:
With a simple dinner of roast chicken and stir-fried veggies I opened a 2010 Pavelot Savigny-les-Beaune which was punching way above its weight. Silken texture, rich red fruit and earthy sous-bois flavors and floral overtones on the nose. For a village-level wine it displayed surprising depth and persistence. It has yet to pick up much in the way of tertiary character, but as appealing as it is now I would be hard pressed to wait many more years on it.
Mark Lipton
originally posted by Pavel Tchichikov:
originally posted by MLipton:
With a simple dinner of roast chicken and stir-fried veggies I opened a 2010 Pavelot Savigny-les-Beaune which was punching way above its weight. Silken texture, rich red fruit and earthy sous-bois flavors and floral overtones on the nose. For a village-level wine it displayed surprising depth and persistence. It has yet to pick up much in the way of tertiary character, but as appealing as it is now I would be hard pressed to wait many more years on it.
Mark Lipton
just yesterday a friend and i were discussing the unpredictability in opening 2010 reds burgs
the range is from glorious complex fruit explosions to what the fuck were you thinking pulling this cork you moron, and it's nothing to do with ultimate quality or even village vs 1er vs GC
some of us who have put on a little extra weight over the years will tell you it's the winemaking vs refreshing lack thereof
so it's on a case by case basis for me, which is to say notes such as above are much appreciated
originally posted by Pavel Tchichikov:
originally posted by MLipton:
With a simple dinner of roast chicken and stir-fried veggies I opened a 2010 Pavelot Savigny-les-Beaune which was punching way above its weight. Silken texture, rich red fruit and earthy sous-bois flavors and floral overtones on the nose. For a village-level wine it displayed surprising depth and persistence. It has yet to pick up much in the way of tertiary character, but as appealing as it is now I would be hard pressed to wait many more years on it.
Mark Lipton
just yesterday a friend and i were discussing the unpredictability in opening 2010 reds burgs
the range is from glorious complex fruit explosions to what the fuck were you thinking pulling this cork you moron, and it's nothing to do with ultimate quality or even village vs 1er vs GC
some of us who have put on a little extra weight over the years will tell you it's the winemaking vs refreshing lack thereof
so it's on a case by case basis for me, which is to say notes such as above are much appreciated