I'm sorry, TNs, but they are from Loire

Arnt Egil Nordlien

Arnt Egil Nordlien
Two new producers to me placed well inside the natural wine stuff-bag.

P'tite gaterie (2006), Domaine des Griottes
40% pinot d'aunis, 30% each gamay and cabernet franc. Vin de table. Unsulphured. 11% alc/vol. Clean young, fruity stuff. Cherries, some franc-notes of blackcurrant-leafs. Lightly kirsch-like hints. Light wine in the mouth. Pure, quite opulent fruit. Simple tasty style with fine acidity and light tannins in the back. Nice, but a bit too expensive.

Anjou Navine 2006, Domaine des Griottes
Unsulphured white Anjou. Brownish/orangey colour. Boy is this volatile on the nose. Some fine chenin-florality there. Some green apples. But can almost not get past the VA. Powerful, acidic chenin in the mouth with loads of tannins for a white in the back. The fruit is all VA mess. Undrinkable.

Les vignes de l'ange vin Les vignes de le regard du loir (2006), Jean-Pierre Robinot
This producer has vines in Jasnieres and Coteaux du Loir, but rarely gets the AOC accepted. The two wines I tasted were very spontaneous in a good way. Robinot do use sulphure but take a look at these photos and you'll understand it ain't much. The "l'ange vin" means the grapes are from his own vineyards. This 100% pinot d'aunis is from grapes inside the Coteaux du Loir, but labelled vin de table. This was a quite typical fresh pinot d'aunis on the nose with fine peppery hints and quite wild spontaneous complexity. Medium bodied fresh and clear pinot d'aunis-fruit. Fine light complexity. Fine acidity and light tannins. Very nice pinot d'aunis, but perhaps a tad expensive.

Le vignes de l'ange vin Nocturne 2005, Jean-Pierre Robinot
Well, here's another 100% pinot d'aunis vin de table. From 60 years old vines. Also here there is some sulphure. Deeper colour. This neede some time to open up. At first this behaved like a fat and concentrated pinot d'aunis and I did not see the point. But after a couple of hours this really opened up beautifully. The same hints of pinot d'aunis, spices, young fruits, but with a really great high-toned florality. Boy was this nice on the nose. Great depth. In the mouth this is very concentrated for a pinot d'aunis. Loads of fruit. But again the niceness of the fine florality wins out and this becomes a really seductive wine in it's unusual largeness for such a grape. Forgive it for that and you have a really tremendous wine well worth the huge price-tag also.
 
Le vignes de l'ange vin Nocturne 2005, Jean-Pierre Robinot...a really tremendous wine well worth the huge price-tag also.

Those are strong words. From your website I see that the wine cost 350NK (over $50). To me, that sounds pretty darn expensive although I can imagine you are somewhat jaded by the general prices in Norway? Or is this similarly expensive direct from the domaine? (Most of his wines that I know are roughly 20euros but I don't know this cuvee and it sounds 'special').

Regardless, always good to hear about a tremendous wine.
 
originally posted by Rahsaan:
Le vignes de l'ange vin Nocturne 2005, Jean-Pierre Robinot...a really tremendous wine well worth the huge price-tag also.

Those are strong words. From your website I see that the wine cost 350NK (over $50). To me, that sounds pretty darn expensive although I can imagine you are somewhat jaded by the general prices in Norway? Or is this similarly expensive direct from the domaine? (Most of his wines that I know are roughly 20euros but I don't know this cuvee and it sounds 'special').

Regardless, always good to hear about a tremendous wine.

I am pretty sure it would be cheaper other places than Norway. The Nocturne was around 10 euro more expensive than the le vignes de le regard du loir. Still expensive. But let's put it this way. I would gladly buy it again even at that price. It is a wine that I really just would like to drink. Although I admit charging that price for a pinot d'aunis is pretty darn weird.
 
Hello,
I tasted last week-end the red from Les Griottes at a special meeting of the AVN, in Paris (with Angevin, Saurigny, Jean-Christopge Garnier...). The two bootles of 2006 were very disapointed (little mouth, not clean...) and the vigneron (Desplat) not likeable. It's an "absolut natural process" and it's produce not clever wine. There is so many better organic red wine in Anjou (Benoit Courault, Bruno Rochard, Cyril Le Moing, Didier Chaffardon...).
Best regards
pierre-alain benoit
 
I saw Robinot wines this morning at Whole Foods in Kensington. The Nocturne was GBP 36.99. A second wine also from Robinot also GBP 26.99. It may be well worth the tag but as far as I know this gotta be the WORST QPR in the Loire...
 
originally posted by Filippo Mattia Ginanni:
I saw Robinot wines this morning at Whole Foods in Kensington...

Good for them! I guess this fits into the Whole Foods broader strategy to lose as much money as possible, at least in the short-term.

But, say what one will, the wine selection at that Kensington branch is pretty respectable/interesting for a supermarket.
 
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