Five wines

Florida Jim

Florida Jim
2005 Castro, Do Quinta da Pellada:
I dont know the make-up of this wine but, if I were guessing, Id say it included some of the port grapes; 13% alcohol; stains the glass purple-red; very enticing aromas of earth and dark fruit with a bloody meat note; extremely concentrated on the palate with smoke, meat, earth and fruit flavors that expand in the mouth and are intense and lasting; long, flavor-filled finish. Exceptional wine with lovely balance and all the intensity one could ask for. Unbelievably good with homemade mac and cheese. Could use time in the cellar but is good now.

1994 Laurel Glen, Cabernet Sauvignon Sonoma Mountain:
This producer can make brett-bombs it can also make really fine wine; this bottle is one of the latter; a very slight touch of brett accents black currants and some red fruit, even a little mineral thrown in; much the same in the mouth with excellent balance, good grip and a composed texture; a bit drying on the finish but its also juicy and long. Not a lot of bottle-bouquet and still some unresolved tannin, but this is quite attractive, reasonably complex and delicious with pizza. Drink or hold.

2002 Allemand, Cornas:
This wine is a good lesson in syrah and domestic producers should be listening; profound? Nope. Good? Yes, indeed. So they knocked the price down about 50% which, when you have the wine, makes you think that maybe they went low. Really good aromatics with both Cornas character and syrah markers; medium bodied and medium length in between is an appealing, earth-driven, syrah based wine that fits easily into your pinot glass but satisfies as though it were from your Hermitage glass. I like it. And, I think it will last.
But if youre looking for a tour de force or blockbuster; well, maybe not here.

Dinner this evening:
Fresh tomato, mozzarella, basil and olive oil salad:
2006 Chat. Grande Cassagne, Ros Costires de Nmes:
Starting to fall apart and letting a bit of alcohol show; iced it was fine and pretty nice with the dish. Drink now and serve very cold.

With stir-fry including a freshly picked cayenne pepper from our garden:
2001 Egon Mller, Riesling Kabinett Scharzhofberger:
The nose is light cream, well-water and Rainer cherry with an diesel/acetone note very fresh and very young; the same elements on the palate with strong flint and some sour watermelon accents, huge acidity that carries the flavors through to the finish which is long and mouth-watering. Very little discernable sweetness but it soothes the cayenne heat nicely. So very young and unformed but showing great promise and real class. Hold at least 10 years. 8.5% alcohol and AP #142-3-02. Brilliant wine.

Best, Jim
 
originally posted by Florida Jim:
1994 Laurel Glen, Cabernet Sauvignon Sonoma Mountain:
This producer can make brett-bombs it can also make really fine wine; this bottle is one of the latter; a very slight touch of brett accents black currants and some red fruit, even a little mineral thrown in; much the same in the mouth with excellent balance, good grip and a composed texture; a bit drying on the finish but its also juicy and long. Not a lot of bottle-bouquet and still some unresolved tannin, but this is quite attractive, reasonably complex and delicious with pizza. Drink or hold.

Hmm, I've never thought of Laurel Glen as being particularly bretty. Good to hear on the 1994. I only have a bottle or two left and was planning on drinking in the next couple of years. Should I wait longer

2002 Allemand, Cornas:
This wine is a good lesson in syrah and domestic producers should be listening; profound? Nope. Good? Yes, indeed. So they knocked the price down about 50% which, when you have the wine, makes you think that maybe they went low. Really good aromatics with both Cornas character and syrah markers; medium bodied and medium length in between is an appealing, earth-driven, syrah based wine that fits easily into your pinot glass but satisfies as though it were from your Hermitage glass. I like it. And, I think it will last.
But if youre looking for a tour de force or blockbuster; well, maybe not here.

To be fair, I really doubt the cellar door price actually changed, rather, it was closed out at either the Kermit, or more likely, distributor level.
 
The 2002 Allemand, Cornas that Jim purchased from an internet retailer had been sourced in London
in 2005. The grey market importer ( my brother-in-law) does not know if the price had been reduced at the CD or after it was sold to the London agent......
 
originally posted by Florida Jim:
VLM,
I am becoming quite sensitive to brett these days.
I suspect outside influence.

I'd noticed that change in your notes. Maybe it's all that California syrah you are drinking making you more attuned to that in other wines? I've never thought of Laurel Glen as making particularly bretty wines.
 
originally posted by Bwood:
originally posted by Florida Jim:
VLM,
I am becoming quite sensitive to brett these days.
I suspect outside influence.

I'd noticed that change in your notes. Maybe it's all that California syrah you are drinking making you more attuned to that in other wines? I've never thought of Laurel Glen as making particularly bretty wines.

Oh, I think it's California alright, just not the wine...
 
Something for the "tech team" to look at...whenever I click on the little red wine glass on a totally new post, it takes me to the first reply and lists that one as "new" but does not list the original post as new.

If this doesn't get fixed immediately, I'm asking for my $200 subscription fee to be refunded!

Marshall
 
Jim,

Regarding brett, have your feelings changed regarding the 2002 Overnoy Houillon Poulsard?

A bottle last week had all different kinds of brett, starting with the barnyard variety, which actually went away after about an hour of air. After the barnyard there was a spicy clove cinnamon aroma that I've been led to believe is a different form of brett. I love the wine, but it certainly isn't squeaky clean.
 
If it starts out with horse, just decant it for an hour or two. In my bottle it went away with air.

By the way, while it is very silky and easy to drink at the moment, I don't think there is a huge rush to open your last bottle. The acidity has softened somewhat, but there was some tannins left and some red fruit also.
 
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