Jeff Grossman
Jeff Grossman
attendees: Chris, Don+Melissa, Howard+Liz, Jayson+Laura, Jeff, Salil
Somehow, I manage to get to about half of these Birthday Jeebi, although the calendaring always seems iffy.
A fair number of the birthday princesses -- SFJoe, Manuel, Jay -- are not here, for various reasons, but the party continues.
We've gathered at Don and Melissa's spacious northernmost-Manhattan digs. laid a pile of food on the table, and started pulling corks:
Vincent Careme 2014 Vouvray "L'Ancestrale" - 12%, no dosage, picked from a single block, good froth, lightweight body but very stony flavors, nice ...later... more sensitive noses than mine declare it slightly corked
Peter Lauer 2023 Ayler Kupp Riesling "Stirn", Fass 15, Grosse Lage - 9%, 3501074/15/24, off-dry (34 g/l), Jayson and I both love this bottling; it is also stony, juicy, very pretty, lime zest, feinherb sweetness(?)
Nanclares y Prieto 2023 Albarino "Alberto", Labrego da Vina - 12%, raised in neutral vessels but with lots of batonnage, opened yesterday, I'm told it's more open today, rather lemony but wrapped in silk
Prager 2013 Wachstum Bodenstein Riesling Smaragd - 13.5%, resinous, midweight, this is just about perfect
Vollenweider 2005 Wolfer Goldgrube "Reiler" Riesling Spatlese - 8.5%, 2 576 801 05 06, aromatics are great but its desperately short of acids
Selbach-Oster 2009 Zeltinger Schlossberg Riesling "Schmitt" - 8.5%, 2 606 319 009 10, one of the block-picked sites, opened yesterday, the sugar is fading but there is just enough still here to keep its balance, beautiful ripeness, these wines are so expressive and fascinating
The Pelaverga Flight
The back story: I went to the 2024 edition of the BBWO (Barolo and Barbaresco World Opening), a huge industry event that has one for-the-public evening. I reported the 2020 version on WD. Anyway, it's a ballroom full of Italians pouring barolo and barbaresco. As always, the makers have something under the table to pour for customers who show special interest, or just to liven up their day. At the Burlotto table, they poured me a taste of their pelaverga -- they were very pleased with it, and I was amazed. It was better than many of the Baroli and Barbareschi that I'd just spent hours tasting!
Since then, I've been working diligently to collect pelaverga wine. I have wine from four different makers (alas, from two vintages). I brought the three that share a vintage so a direct comparison is sensible.
There isn't much pelaverga planted anymore; I think all the Piedmontese pelaverga is from Verduno. It is another of their local grapes used to make 'little wines' that are actually consumed while waiting for the honkin' big reds to age. The wine is pale red, floral and fruity and juicy, with only a little tannic grip.
Burlotto 2022 Pelaverga - dark pink, tingly acidity, strawberry-ish, light and bright, kinda spicy and a little severe right now
Castello di Verduno 2022 Basadone Pelaverga - very similar but the nose is enlivened with a little citrus and the palate is a little less stiff, yum; gets the nod as the crowd favorite of the three
Diego Morra 2022 Verduno Pelaverga - Diego who? As it happens, I tasted four of his baroli at that BBWO event and liked three of them so was pleased to find he makes a pelaverga; I think this is the most vinous and refined of the flight; but those darn alleles, Jayson thinks this is the least-interesting (and most-yucky) one
Lopez de Heredia 2010 Rioja Reserva "Vina Bosconia" - corked
Dom. de Montille 2020 Nuits-Saint-Georges "Aux Saint-Julien" - very strange... clean and pure, but also piney and stinging, bleh
Texier 1999 Chateauneuf-du-Pape - 13.5%, this is great, so much red fruit, great texture, a little orange pith, acidity still dancing the line of lively and sour
Francois et Fils 2019 Cote-Rotie - 14%, co-ferment 97% syrah and 3% viognier, nice enough red wine but it does not say Cote-Rotie to me
Ch. Leoville-Barton 2002 Saint-Julien - Thor legacy bottle; baked cherry pie and dirt, comfortable, beautiful; Salil says it was even better the next day
Foreau 2002 Vouvray Demi-Sec - nose of burned marshmallows, sharp, narrow; Brad thinks this is heat-damaged
Huet 2019 Vouvray Demi-Sec "Le Mont" - really good, face-powder, frangipane, liqueur-ish in texture but only just-so sweetness
Next day... very pale color, the texture has lightened up a bit but otherwise holding well
Dom. Baumard 1998 Quarts de Chaume - 12.5%, opened yesterday, another tutti-frutti/marzipan wine, apricot fruit with relatively modest sweetness
Dom. Baumard 1985 Quarts de Chaume - OMG bottle, amazing, vigorous, bright steely acids, totally slurpable, heavenly with a slice of Humboldt Fog
Zind-Humbrecht 1989 Tokay Pinot Gris "Clos Jebsal", VT - weird nose, lovely palate, sturdy botrytis-y wine
Next day... nose is still weird, OK, but weirdly 7-Up-ish with maybe a little quince paste in it... the palate continues wonderful: sweet but not catastrophically so, mixed apricots and tangerines (and botrytis)
Jo Pithon 1997 Coteaux du Layon St. Aubin, "Clos des Bois" - incredibly sweet but another one that desperately lacks acidity
For those curious about Pithon, there is a great page on him, the estate, and this wine at the Wine Doctor: here (and the referenced map is here).
Many thanks to Don and Melissa for hosting us, many thanks to Brad for organizing, many thanks to Jayson and Laura for the lift downtown.
And thanks to Brad for the photo:
Somehow, I manage to get to about half of these Birthday Jeebi, although the calendaring always seems iffy.
A fair number of the birthday princesses -- SFJoe, Manuel, Jay -- are not here, for various reasons, but the party continues.
We've gathered at Don and Melissa's spacious northernmost-Manhattan digs. laid a pile of food on the table, and started pulling corks:
Vincent Careme 2014 Vouvray "L'Ancestrale" - 12%, no dosage, picked from a single block, good froth, lightweight body but very stony flavors, nice ...later... more sensitive noses than mine declare it slightly corked
Peter Lauer 2023 Ayler Kupp Riesling "Stirn", Fass 15, Grosse Lage - 9%, 3501074/15/24, off-dry (34 g/l), Jayson and I both love this bottling; it is also stony, juicy, very pretty, lime zest, feinherb sweetness(?)
Nanclares y Prieto 2023 Albarino "Alberto", Labrego da Vina - 12%, raised in neutral vessels but with lots of batonnage, opened yesterday, I'm told it's more open today, rather lemony but wrapped in silk
Prager 2013 Wachstum Bodenstein Riesling Smaragd - 13.5%, resinous, midweight, this is just about perfect
Vollenweider 2005 Wolfer Goldgrube "Reiler" Riesling Spatlese - 8.5%, 2 576 801 05 06, aromatics are great but its desperately short of acids
Selbach-Oster 2009 Zeltinger Schlossberg Riesling "Schmitt" - 8.5%, 2 606 319 009 10, one of the block-picked sites, opened yesterday, the sugar is fading but there is just enough still here to keep its balance, beautiful ripeness, these wines are so expressive and fascinating
The Pelaverga Flight
The back story: I went to the 2024 edition of the BBWO (Barolo and Barbaresco World Opening), a huge industry event that has one for-the-public evening. I reported the 2020 version on WD. Anyway, it's a ballroom full of Italians pouring barolo and barbaresco. As always, the makers have something under the table to pour for customers who show special interest, or just to liven up their day. At the Burlotto table, they poured me a taste of their pelaverga -- they were very pleased with it, and I was amazed. It was better than many of the Baroli and Barbareschi that I'd just spent hours tasting!
Since then, I've been working diligently to collect pelaverga wine. I have wine from four different makers (alas, from two vintages). I brought the three that share a vintage so a direct comparison is sensible.
There isn't much pelaverga planted anymore; I think all the Piedmontese pelaverga is from Verduno. It is another of their local grapes used to make 'little wines' that are actually consumed while waiting for the honkin' big reds to age. The wine is pale red, floral and fruity and juicy, with only a little tannic grip.
Burlotto 2022 Pelaverga - dark pink, tingly acidity, strawberry-ish, light and bright, kinda spicy and a little severe right now
Castello di Verduno 2022 Basadone Pelaverga - very similar but the nose is enlivened with a little citrus and the palate is a little less stiff, yum; gets the nod as the crowd favorite of the three
Diego Morra 2022 Verduno Pelaverga - Diego who? As it happens, I tasted four of his baroli at that BBWO event and liked three of them so was pleased to find he makes a pelaverga; I think this is the most vinous and refined of the flight; but those darn alleles, Jayson thinks this is the least-interesting (and most-yucky) one
Lopez de Heredia 2010 Rioja Reserva "Vina Bosconia" - corked
Dom. de Montille 2020 Nuits-Saint-Georges "Aux Saint-Julien" - very strange... clean and pure, but also piney and stinging, bleh
Texier 1999 Chateauneuf-du-Pape - 13.5%, this is great, so much red fruit, great texture, a little orange pith, acidity still dancing the line of lively and sour
Francois et Fils 2019 Cote-Rotie - 14%, co-ferment 97% syrah and 3% viognier, nice enough red wine but it does not say Cote-Rotie to me
Ch. Leoville-Barton 2002 Saint-Julien - Thor legacy bottle; baked cherry pie and dirt, comfortable, beautiful; Salil says it was even better the next day
Foreau 2002 Vouvray Demi-Sec - nose of burned marshmallows, sharp, narrow; Brad thinks this is heat-damaged
Huet 2019 Vouvray Demi-Sec "Le Mont" - really good, face-powder, frangipane, liqueur-ish in texture but only just-so sweetness
Next day... very pale color, the texture has lightened up a bit but otherwise holding well
Dom. Baumard 1998 Quarts de Chaume - 12.5%, opened yesterday, another tutti-frutti/marzipan wine, apricot fruit with relatively modest sweetness
Dom. Baumard 1985 Quarts de Chaume - OMG bottle, amazing, vigorous, bright steely acids, totally slurpable, heavenly with a slice of Humboldt Fog
Zind-Humbrecht 1989 Tokay Pinot Gris "Clos Jebsal", VT - weird nose, lovely palate, sturdy botrytis-y wine
Next day... nose is still weird, OK, but weirdly 7-Up-ish with maybe a little quince paste in it... the palate continues wonderful: sweet but not catastrophically so, mixed apricots and tangerines (and botrytis)
Jo Pithon 1997 Coteaux du Layon St. Aubin, "Clos des Bois" - incredibly sweet but another one that desperately lacks acidity
For those curious about Pithon, there is a great page on him, the estate, and this wine at the Wine Doctor: here (and the referenced map is here).
Many thanks to Don and Melissa for hosting us, many thanks to Brad for organizing, many thanks to Jayson and Laura for the lift downtown.
And thanks to Brad for the photo: