TN: Vague reminiscenses of Montevertine, Jadot, LeClerc and few others

Jay Miller

Jay Miller
I don't think anyone was taking notes on Sunday so I'll jot down what I remember and hope others can fill in the blanks at which point I'll update my notes with producers and vineyards.

2002 Foreau Brut - Showing a bit younger and rougher than the 2002 Huet Petillant. Good but needs time to come together.

2001 Jadot Savigny Les Beaune Clos des Guettes (white) - on first pour all I can taste is the oak, but it started coming into balance with air and finished the night very well indeed.

1999 Atillio Ghisolfi Barolo Bricco Visette - good, enjoyable, and I understand inexpensive Barolo.

2004 Atillio Ghisolfi Barolo Bricco Visette - a clear stop up in quality, structure and red fruit. Went back to this a few times.

1988 Rene LeClerc Gevrey Chambertin 'Clos Prieur' - Nice, mature, a bit barnyardy. I'd have had more of this if I didn't keep returning to the next two wines.

1985 Montevertine Riserva - lovely wine and a much better showing than my last bottle. Certainly faded but complex and precise flavors.

2000 Jadot Chambolle Musigny 'Amoureuses' - my WOTN with rich layered flavors and a beautiful nose. As a very general rule I think 2000 red Burgundies are drinking the best of any vintage from 1992 on. Won't be true in 10 years but for right now...

1998 Jadot Volnay Clos de la Barre - good wine, I didn't pay too much attention as I'd just had it recently.

And from Saturday the 2006 Konstantin Frank Rkatsitelli was showing too much sulphur for me but some enjoyable wine underneath it (are they really aiming for this to be aged that long?) and the 1998 Allemand Reynard was beautiful and recognizably Allemand but a bit disjointed. Probably just needs time, not drinking nearly as well as the 1998 Verset right now.
 
originally posted by Jay Miller:
TN: Vague reminiscenses of Montevertine, Jadot, Engel and few others
2001 Jadot Puligny somethingorother - on first pour all I can taste is the oak, but it started coming into balance with air and finished the night very well indeed.
Hmm. Jadot uses very little new wood.
1988 Rene Engel Gevrey Chambertin somethingorother
No -- there was only Vosne and Clos-Vougeot there. Ren LeClerc in Gevrey?
 
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
originally posted by Jay Miller:
TN: Vague reminiscenses of Montevertine, Jadot, Engel and few others
2001 Jadot Puligny somethingorother - on first pour all I can taste is the oak, but it started coming into balance with air and finished the night very well indeed.
Hmm. Jadot uses very little new wood.
1988 Rene Engel Gevrey Chambertin somethingorother
No -- there was only Vosne and Clos-Vougeot there. Ren LeClerc in Gevrey?

well it sure tasted like wood.

and yes, thank you, Rene LeClerc. It was nice but as noted I never really went back to it. Unexciting.
 
We had a very similar experience with the 1998 Allemand Chaillot last Friday. It was very tight with lots of potential.

This is just a wild guess, but was the 1999 Barolo from Boasso? CSW had a bunch of these in during their last sale, and it fits your description of good, solid, well priced Barolo.
 
originally posted by Marc D:


This is just a wild guess, but was the 1999 Barolo from Boasso? CSW had a bunch of these in during their last sale, and it fits your description of good, solid, well priced Barolo.

Apparently not :)
 
originally posted by Jay Miller:
1985 Montevertine Riserva - lovely wine and a much better showing than my last bottle. Certainly faded but complex and precise flavors.

I just had a bottle of 1985 Pergole Torte a few weeks back and it was wonderful - and no signs of fading. Lucky the one who got the last bottles from CSW.
 
originally posted by Cristian Dezso:
originally posted by Jay Miller:
1985 Montevertine Riserva - lovely wine and a much better showing than my last bottle. Certainly faded but complex and precise flavors.

I just had a bottle of 1985 Pergole Torte a few weeks back and it was wonderful - and no signs of fading. Lucky the one who got the last bottles from CSW.

Pergole Torte is definitely the best of their wines for aging. 20 years seems like a good time to start drinking them :). Still remember the 1982 Joe opened at a dinnner a few years back (one of my first two ever Montevertines). Still young.

The others don't need as much time and IMO can often surpass the Pergole Torte when younger.
 
originally posted by Jay Miller:
And from Saturday the 2006 Konstantin Frank Rkatsitelli was showing too much sulphur for me but some enjoyable wine underneath it (are they really aiming for this to be aged that long?)...

Too bad. We didn't have that problem with the bottle last November. As you commented in another thread, it's a fun wine, and I don't get the impression they intend it to be aged.
 
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