originally posted by MLipton:
Turkey Day wines?Happy Thanksgiving to those of you who celebrate. Our plan is to have a roast duck for tonight’s dinner (domestic turkey == meh) and to open a bottle of something nice. 2014 Charvin CdP is right now the odds-on favorite around here. What are your plans?
Mark Lipton
originally posted by mark e:
originally posted by MLipton:
Turkey Day wines?Happy Thanksgiving to those of you who celebrate. Our plan is to have a roast duck for tonight’s dinner (domestic turkey == meh) and to open a bottle of something nice. 2014 Charvin CdP is right now the odds-on favorite around here. What are your plans?
Mark Lipton
We had 2025 Foillard beaujolais nouveau. Worked perfectly.
originally posted by robert ames:
originally posted by mark e:
originally posted by MLipton:
Turkey Day wines?Happy Thanksgiving to those of you who celebrate. Our plan is to have a roast duck for tonight’s dinner (domestic turkey == meh) and to open a bottle of something nice. 2014 Charvin CdP is right now the odds-on favorite around here. What are your plans?
Mark Lipton
We had 2025 Foillard beaujolais nouveau. Worked perfectly.
so it's back, eh? a few years back he stopped making nouveau and used the fruit to make Beaujolais Villages instead.
originally posted by Mark Anisman:
2015 Gonon St. Joseph
Tasted young, it was great. I haven’t tasted it since. Despite how ripe the 15 Northern Rhône’s tasted on release, they can be more ungiving now. Mark’s tasting of this wine now will, of course supersede this generalization.originally posted by Larry Stein:
originally posted by Mark Anisman:
2015 Gonon St. Joseph
I'll be curious about this wine. I have a small stash, but haven't opened one yet.
Their loss. It is all quite interesting, and I have had a fair number of excellent ones.originally posted by Rahsaan:
Yet, somehow, nobody in my family was interested in hearing me wax on about English sparkling wine...
The label says 12.5%.originally posted by mark e:
Brun is 13.5