Quite a few

Florida Jim

Florida Jim
Whites:

2007 Dnnhoff, Riesling Estate:
Cherry pits and rainwater with a touch of flint and light RS; 10% alcohol and about $17. Straight-forward but charming and lovely with Masaman curry.

2005 Pieropan, Soave Calvarino:
Diane made a dish that included sauted cabbage in mustard it seemed a difficult match so I tried this. As good a match as Chablis with oysters, this is taut and still slightly closed but vibrantly aromatic and brilliant in the mouth. Complex, intense, nearly electric acidity and real depth in the pure fruit flavors and everything in perfect harmony. A joy to drink by itself but beyond words with the dish.

2007 Masi, Maisanco:
75% pinot grigio vinted in stainless, 25% verduzzo vinted in oak after drying several weeks on racks; 13% alcohol and about $14. Clear and pale yellow with green glints; smells mostly of citrus and apricot; tastes similar but with more complexity as apple and honey tones appear and some mineral; medium length with a slightly bitter finish. Diane likes it (which of course, is all I ever need to know) so we will buy more; as it so happens, I like it, too. Excellent with grilled chicken, roasted peppers, braised fennel and grilled olive bread with EVOO. And a pretty sipper by itself.

2005 Chteau dEpir, Savennieres:
A cabbage and white bean dish this evening matched well with this wine; not especially aromatic but what was there was citrus, dried flowers and mineral; light bodied but moderately intense in the mouth with flavors that follow the nose, not any wool or lanolin tones but some quince and apricot; medium length finish. Maybe the nicest thing about this wine is how well balanced and open it was. A really good time to try a bottle if you have access. And quite good with the dish. About $15.

2006 Dom. de la Fruitire, Muscadet Cuve Petit M:
12% alcohol and about $10; fresh citrus and saline nose; not especially deep but solid fruit with rainwater, citrus and sea shell accents, decent volume and intensity and a very pretty and long finish. This may be slightly closed at the moment but its also lip-smackingly delicious and very nice with a pasta and olive dish.

Reds:

2006 Duboeuf, Fleurie Fleur:
Almost black in the glass and much less polished than expected this is strongly flavored, not overly floral, without signs of banana or candy. Deeply fruited (mostly black fruit), rustic in construction and fairly tannic; not yet of a piece. Nonetheless, I enjoyed it. About $10.
Day two: Much more integrated with only a little tannin showing; still plenty of depth and intensity. It appears a little cellar time is a good idea.
(Aside: It has been a very long time since I have had a Duboeuf wine that I wanted to have again this one I will buy more of. It is not as precise or complex as the Porphyry (note follows) or many of the finest producers in Beaujolais, but it is very good wine at a fraction of the price. And it is a welcome change from this house.)

2007 Edmunds St. John, Gamay Porphyry:
More together, less extractive and better balanced than the preceding wine still somewhat closed but much more approachable then two months ago; juicy, stony, concentrated black fruit with accents of strawberry, spice and mineral; excellent length. 13% alcohol, $20 and well worth it. Drink or hold.

2008 Lurton, Malbec:
Fresh fruit nose that shows the characteristics of the variety; middle-weight, silky texture, moderately intense with light spice tones and medium length. Not structured or meant to age, screw-cap, $7; and all one could want or ask at that price.

2005 Terra Rosa, Malbec:
This is a Laurel Glen project in Argentina, 14.5% alcohol, screw-cap and about $13; its over-ripe, over oaked, has little, if any, varietal character and it finishes hot; this could be from anywhere and, if I had my way, Id send it back there wherever there might be. With so many reasonably priced and quality or at least enjoyable malbecs in the marketplace today, this is a joke.

2007 Castle Rock, Pinot Noir Mendocino:
This bottle is softer, sweeter and less aromatic then the last but it still delivers a tasty drink when paired with gorgonzola polenta with tomato sauce. 13.8% alcohol and about $12. Somewhat above quaffing status, if you ask me.

Best, Jim
 
i seem to remember you not completely loving the '05 epire. or was it the cuvee special you weren't sure of? or am i misremembering?
 
2007 Masi, Maisanco:
75% pinot grigio vinted in stainless, 25% verduzzo vinted in oak after drying several weeks on racks; 13% alcohol and about $14. Clear and pale yellow with green glints; smells mostly of citrus and apricot; tastes similar but with more complexity as apple and honey tones appear and some mineral; medium length with a slightly bitter finish. Diane likes it (which of course, is all I ever need to know) so we will buy more; as it so happens, I like it, too. Excellent with grilled chicken, roasted peppers, braised fennel and grilled olive bread with EVOO. And a pretty sipper by itself.

Thanks for the note on this. I was eyeing this and wondered how it might be. Sounds up my alley. And I've always liked Masi wines before.
 
Bill,
Thanks for reading - you must be young, with a memory like that. The Speciale was my problem wine, although its been awhile so maybe I should try it again.

Steve,
Where is the pot-stirring enoticon when you need it.

Mark,
For a lot of years, I passed Masi wines by. I was wrong.

Best, Jim
 
Masianco is one of my go-to white wines when someone asks me for something "safe" to use at a dinner or party. The Verduzzo really adds an extra dimension of flavor to the PG, elevating it out of the "it's wet, conveys alcohol, and pretty inoffensive" usual PG classification and into the level of being a wine I look forward to every vintage.

I've had the pleasure of spending a little time with Raffaele and Sandro Boscaini and they're quite the innovators. The fact that they pretty much developed Amarone as we know it today would grandfather them into being considered traditionalists regardless of what they do with their grapes, but the amount of research they've done (and continue to do) in enology is staggering. It's difficult to find occasions where Amarone is appropriate, but when the planets align in favor of a complex and intense wine made from ultra-ripe grapes, Masi is my usual choice. The single-vineyard bottlings need 10-20 years in the cellar to really develop the secondary nuances that separate them from the rest of the lineup, but it's worth the wait (plus you can be drinking their other wines while you wait.

-Eden (1990 Mazzano is scary-good, as is the 1997 Campalongo de Torre, if you can find them)(and then if you can afford them)
 
Eden,
One of the things I like about Masi is that they have an affordable line of wines that seem to deliver more quality then one expects at those price points. And while I do enjoy Amarone, I eat almost no red meat so if it ain't cheese I don't really have a need.
And my criteria for buying anything that needs 20 years in the cellar is "will my daughter like it?"
Best, Jim
 
originally posted by Florida Jim:
Steve,
Where is the pot-stirring enoticon when you need it.
I have said this before, too. In the fall of '06, I was commuting to Minneapolis and drinking the Duboeuf crus.
 
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