Scott Kraft
Scott Kraft
Bless you, Jeff.
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
A very good Brunate 1999 from M. Sebaste the other night, a new wave oenologue that, paradoxically, Zul had good things to say about. It's drinking fine now, but no hurry by any means.
originally posted by Scott Kraft:
I miss Zul
originally posted by Bwood:
originally posted by Cristian Dezso:
originally posted by Levi Dalton:
'97 Percristina was also a little underwhelming.
But a lot of '97s are underwhelming.
I liked the '97 Marcarini Brunate a lot. Less so the La Serra. The Monprivato was nice too, if a bit simple.
Yeah, I liked that '97 Brunate as well. I think I already drank all of my bottles.
I think if you believe that the new wavier wines of the 90s will end up being too short on structure, that you'd generally guess their '96s might be better than their '97s.
I tasted a lot of 1999 Baroli in Piemonte and most of the new wave was still pretty disgusting. By 2001 vintage, things were beginning to change, but there was still a way to go, and for some producers, still a long way to go.originally posted by Bwood:
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
A very good Brunate 1999 from M. Sebaste the other night, a new wave oenologue that, paradoxically, Zul had good things to say about. It's drinking fine now, but no hurry by any means.
You now by 1999-2000 plenty of people who were at the extreme end of the new wave spectrum in the mid 1990s had totally changed or markedly moderated. Thrown away their rotofermentors and moderated on other fronts. I remember some Zul notes on some '99s and '00s in the Piemonte that crystalized that for me. I think about, for instance, some very nice remarks about a couple wines from Albino Rocca. My sense is that '95-'98 was the height of the era of some winemakers experimenting making soft, purple, underfruited sweet wines reeking of new oak and Hawaiian Tropic Suntan Oil that drank poorly young and promised to age about as well as a Behrens & Hitchcock Merlot.