originally posted by Kay Bixler:
We drank a '97 Bourg last year and it was terrific. The wine should last forever. Drink or hold.
Hold and drink?
originally posted by Kay Bixler:
We drank a '97 Bourg last year and it was terrific. The wine should last forever. Drink or hold.
originally posted by SFJoe:
My note to myself from 2/07 on the '97 Bourg is to hold off until at least 2010. Time to start in on the Poyeux now, IMO, and I'm about 40% of the way through my box of Clos.originally posted by VLM:
You didn't say it was 1997 BourgI only have a single bottle of this. Really not for the ages? I think the 1997 Clos is drinking really well now and not at any risk of immediate decline.
I would expect the Bourg to not quite be there yet, although they drink well for a long time.
originally posted by Jay Miller:
originally posted by VLM:
You didn't say it was 1997 BourgI only have a single bottle of this. Really not for the ages? I think the 1997 Clos is drinking really well now and not at any risk of immediate decline.
I would expect the Bourg to not quite be there yet, although they drink well for a long time.
To the best of my recollection it wasn't. Are you confusing the Huet and the Foucault?
originally posted by Kay Bixler:
We drank a '97 Bourg last year and it was terrific. The wine should last forever. Drink or hold.
originally posted by Chris Coad:
I have no idea what anybody is talking about.
It would be highly unusual for a bottle of this to exist, since wasn't that the year that the Volstead Act was put in place?
It does. It's also to describe someone who is obsessively into something (like a hobby). Could be used in place of geek to some extent. Much like 'trainspotter' was used to describe someone who stood over the shoulder of a dj to see what tracks they were playing. Some point down the line, the term 'anorak' seemed to replace it (at least the way I had seen it used) as a music geek who obsessed over finding the rarest funk 45 amongst other things.originally posted by Chris Coad:
I thought "anorak" meant something "parka"?
originally posted by Chris Coad:
I thought "anorak" meant something "parka"?
It does. It's also to describe someone who is obsessively into something (like a hobby). Could be used in place of geek to some extent. Much like 'trainspotter' was used to describe someone who stood over the shoulder of a dj to see what tracks they were playing. Some point down the line, the term 'anorak' seemed to replace it (at least the way I had seen it used) as a music geek who obsessed over finding the rarest funk 45 amongst other things.
Yes, but... Haven't you met Jamie Goode?
originally posted by Chris Coad:
He was not wearing a parka, though.
originally posted by Chris Coad:
Yes, but... Haven't you met Jamie Goode?
I have met Jamie Goode. As I recall, he was very excited by California syrah at the time. Also, rather tipsy and jet-lagged. He was not wearing a parka, though.
My understanding is that the food at Minetta was the only thing Plotnicki has been right about in many years. At least that's the story told by certain people "indigenous" to this board.originally posted by Brad Kane:
originally posted by Chris Coad:
Yes, but... Haven't you met Jamie Goode?
I have met Jamie Goode. As I recall, he was very excited by California syrah at the time. Also, rather tipsy and jet-lagged. He was not wearing a parka, though.
As I recall, we met Jamie at the Spanish dinner at Minetta where Plotnicki came, made everyone open up the wines so he could taste through them and left before ordering so he wouldn't have to eat there.
Being 1947, wines labeled as Cabernet needed only to contain 51% Cabernet with the remainder being primarily Zinfandel, Carignane, Petite Sirah and Mondeuse.