Peter Creasey
Peter Creasey
Any thoughts, please, on Ch Latour 2000 with Guinea Fowl with Liquorice Braised Leeks, Morels, Rosemary, Spinach, Garlic Butter.
Thanks.
. . . . . Pete
Thanks.
. . . . . Pete
originally posted by Peter Creasey:
Levi, thanks for the good info. Rightly or wrongly, I read you to be perhaps lukewarm about the pairing.
originally posted by Pavel Tchichikov:
there are significant chunks (35%?) of latour vineyards that are atypical for pauillac and are far more like what you'd find in st estephe and father north, and it is in these lands where the much-maligned-by-hollywood merlot excels so dramatically: delivering surprising power, but also a chewy texture laced with red-brick earthiness.
In the words of Richard Olney, whom we both so much admire: simple wines with complex food, complex wines with simple food.originally posted by Tom Blach:
In an ideal world I'd miss out liquorice, spinach and garlic, the first two in particular having mouth-numbing qualities which don't help great wine,but intelligent consumption will anyway sort out any difficulties. My bete noire with grand red wines from Burgundy, the northern Rhone and Burgundy is the almost unavoidable sweet-sour element that one finds in so much modern cooking.
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
In the words of Richard Olney, whom we both so much admire: simple wines with complex food, complex wines with simple food.
originally posted by Pavel Tchichikov:
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
In the words of Richard Olney, whom we both so much admire: simple wines with complex food, complex wines with simple food.
there is so much to admire about Richard Olney as a quick glance at my book shelves will support
however this view seems, at best, outdated. no?
originally posted by mark e:
originally posted by Pavel Tchichikov:
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
In the words of Richard Olney, whom we both so much admire: simple wines with complex food, complex wines with simple food.
there is so much to admire about Richard Olney as a quick glance at my book shelves will support
however this view seems, at best, outdated. no?
Yes. Like so many anodyne truisms this is perhaps sometimes true, but also false. Yeah, overly simplistic.
Yes. Absolutely. In the couple of decades i lived in Italy i never heard anyone pay much attention to it. Arneis was something you would guzzle while looking at the menu, then a bottle of dolcetto, followed by Barolo or Barbaresco when the food arrived. Sometimes an older bottle from the cellar after dinner. Until the 90s it was hard to order wines from other regions.originally posted by Pavel Tchichikov:
originally posted by mark e:
originally posted by Pavel Tchichikov:
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
In the words of Richard Olney, whom we both so much admire: simple wines with complex food, complex wines with simple food.
there is so much to admire about Richard Olney as a quick glance at my book shelves will support
however this view seems, at best, outdated. no?
Yes. Like so many anodyne truisms this is perhaps sometimes true, but also false. Yeah, overly simplistic.
certainly, but i also meant "dated" in a sense that back then one did not obsess with pairings to the extent that we do; in fact i am not sure they do in france to this day, based on conversations and dinners with gallic friends