My dinner with Louis-Michel Liger-Belair

maureen

maureen nelson
Last night I hosted a small dinner party with the guests of honor being Louis-Michel Liger-Belair of the Domaine du Comte Liger-Belair and Peter Wasserman. This is what we drank:

Before going to the table:

1998 Willi Schaefer Graacher Domprobst Spatlese Auction
1996 Fritz Haag Bruaneberger Juffer Sonnenuhr spatlese

With a carmelized onion tart and an arugula/watermelon radish salad:

1990 Trimbach Cuvee Frederic Emile

With brined rack of pork roasted over fennel and garlic, lentils de puy, and sugar snaps:

1988 Morot Beaune Marconnets
1988 Pousse d'Or Clos de la Bousse d'Or Volnay

With a couple of excellent american cheeses:

1955 La Romanee

With pecan butter cookies:

1999 Donnhoff Niederhauser Hemannshohle auslese
1996 Navarro late harvest cluster select riesling

The schaefer was in a really great spot - very focused and deep and delicious; the haag suffered by being served after altho it's a perfectly nice wine. The CFE I decanted for a bit as I suspected it could use the air and indeed it blossomed. Pure, structured, lush (yes all at once), just excellent. One of the best showings of this wine I've experienced since it shut down years ago. From a stash bought from David Schildknecht when he was at the party source in the mid-90s. Both 88s were decanted shortly before being served. Both were excellent, the volnay a bit more pliant and aromatic, the beaune more masculine and mineral. Peter had suggested I serve CdB wines and LM selected these two from among the several that I stood up. The Beaune I bought for $20 in 1990 - gee, those were the good ol' days.

I acquired the La Romanee about 8 years ago from a local retailer who'd bought a cellar. About a 3.5" ullage. We left this on its side and pulled the cork before dinner - well, tried to pull the cork, the moment peter touched it, it went right into the bottle where we left it. When we were ready to focus on it, it was decanted and poured. It smelled a bit musty at first and I was a bit concerned but I was at least glad to verify the good color I'd observed through the bottle as the wine was very alive. In fact, the wine was much more ruby and dark than one would expect for its more than 50 years of age. LM seemed to think it was a bit over the hill - at first. Because with air, the wine blossomed and was totally delicious - all of us were quite pleased with it and I couldn't tell you whether the fruit was short-lived because the wine only lasted outside the bottle and in the decanter and our glasses for about 20-30 minutes and then it was down the hatch(es) so to speak.

The Donnhoff was very low acid and flat and boring and I refused to end the evening on that note so opened the Navarro (Peter had already rejected the half bottles of 86 and 88 climens I'd chilled - can you imagine?). It was quite dark in color, rich and sweet but very well-balanced with excellent acidity. Quite lip-smacking.

In response to some of my questions (such as what do you think of the vineyards you are newly exploiting), LM revealed that he greatly prefers petit monts to suchots as he finds the latter too soft and forward! He's also quite pleased to be producing echezeaux which he thinks is an underrated grand cru - I think his explanation for it being underrated is because it's the first wine shown at DRC, which of course has many grand grand crus. So while it may be a "lesser" wine at DRC it nonetheless is still grand cru and with the exception of about 5% of the production, it shows its elevation over premier cru. When I asked where outside of vosne he'd love to own vines he quickly replied Chambolle Amoureuses.

Louis-Michel is a charming man and he and Peter (and Cole and Tim and Francoise) mostly abided by my request to speak English, not French, so I could follow the conversation. Peter was surprised that LM didn't want the 88s decanted sooner but they were so fruity and ready that the lack of air didn't hurt them much. The La Romanee really only needed 5 minutes to show off so that was fine too.

At midnight, the crowd went off into the snowstorm but all arrived at their resting destinations safely.
 
Not a bad lineup.

Did the cheeses impress upon him the value of American dairy farming?

And what does Msr. Liger-Belair think of German riesling?
 
He seemed to enjoy the cheese, especially the "tomme de Kentucky"; he loves German riesling and thought that the high point of the CFE was that it was not very Alsatian (which apparently, in his mind, means unlike ZH). A very nice guy but charmingly provincial in some ways (and very worldly in others).
 
German Riesling is wildly popular with plenty of Burgundians -- Frdy Mugnier, Dominque Lafon, Jeremy Seysses, Jean-Marc Roulot, etc., etc. Not a surprise, I guess.

Louis-Michel is also very interested in Bandol.

Sounds lovely, Maureen. But why an auction Sptlese from a somewhat fleshy vintage before a regular Sptlese from an austere vintage?
 
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
German Riesling is wildly popular with plenty of Burgundians...Not a surprise, I guess.

Yes, the connections from riesling to pinot noir are clear but I can imagine that some might get tripped up by the rs in many German rieslings. Expectations/preferences and such.
 
Claude, i didn't plan that - Peter wanted to try the schaefer and I had thought we'd only do one bottle before dinner. The pacing wasn't right, I appreciate.
 
Why the name?

Tangent: our fave goat cheese producer in Vermont made, during a certain former representative's little campaign finance imbroglio, a cheese she called Tomme DeLay. It was awfully good.
 
Very stylish, Maureen, it would be great fun to browse your cellar inventory. Will you be interviewed on Grape Radio soon (imagine smile emoticon here)?
 
On both technical specs (not the most scientific ratio, but I typically use RS against total acid + sugar-free dry extract for a simple estimate) and mouthfeel, especially for the Auslesen and above. Auction Sptlesen qualify as higher prdikat in my book as well. I would argue that it's fleshier than 2000 and 2004, and depending on where we are, in 2001 as well.
 
speaking only about the schaefer, I'd agree it showed as a richer wine than most 04 spatlesen I've tried. Haven't had many 2000s.

Ian - c'mon over! No more 55 la romanee tho!
 
After drinking a wide array of 1998s over the years (and 2000, 2001 and 2004) I would have to disagree.

Of course I don't buy the auction wines (never seen the value proposition as worth it), so no data points to speak of there.
 
Hi David,
The auction Schaefer from 1998 has just that edge in terms of creaminess - it is quite a powerful wine. Of course powerful stands here for: "powerful for the 90s" and not "05-06-07 powerful"
J
 
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