originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
Well, nothing is ever uniformly the case except death and taxes.
re: Gouges, the changes there were fast, definite, and dramatic, clearly style-driven and not weather-driven. Here's the text of the "About" page on Ripley's web site:
"Big firm tannins were always associated with Nuits Saint Georges, and when he took over Gregory Gouges saw one his tasks as ‘taming the tannins’. Down the road, his colleague Erwan Faiveley, also recently installed, was doing the same thing. A new cuverie allowed Gregory to work more precisely, and over the years the wines have got ever finer, perfectly reflecting their terroirs."
I would personally place the before/after marker somewhere in between 2002 and 2006, which coincides with the new generation coming aboard. [edit: and then around 2010 the oak-toast level seemed noticeably ratcheted up.]
I am a big fan of the wines from both periods, but they are very very different.
Anyone interested in a Gouges LSG vertical?