Recent tastes

Florida Jim

Florida Jim
Bubbles:

2005 Marques de Monistrol, Cava Winemakers Select:
Even better than their non-vintage brut, this is quite dry, spicy, focused and elegant with a continuous bead and a clean finish. Hard to beat at $15.

Whites:

2005 Luneau-Papin, Muscadet Clos des Alles:
Beautiful wine; bright, charming, flavorful and so clean; as balanced and precise a Muscadet as one can find and drinking well now.

2008 Bedrock, Cuve Caritas:
55% old vine semillon and 45% sauvignon blanc in 100% new French oak; powerfully scented with white fruit, spice and vanilla tones; an almost lyrical presentation in the mouth with semillon flavors emphasized and a touch of butterscotch oak; long finish. Needs 3-5 years to integrate the wood (although its not intrusive now) and was delicious with chicken Caesar salad.
Day two: much the same; this either has too much oak or it needs time to integrate.

2007 Quinto de Ventozelo, Douro Cisterda da Ribeira:
A Portuguese white made from 30% cdega, 30% gouveio, 20% viosinho and 20% rabigato; 13% alcohol; aromas of cream soda, citrus skin and white pepper; similar in the mouth with some unripe apricot and a light saline component added, spicy, smoothly textured but crackling acidity; a touch bitter on a very long finish. This wine is all about its acidity it carries it and drives it but does not overwhelm it. Very good with a white bean and chard dish, pretty good on its own and well worth buying again at $7.

Pinks:

2008 Bedrock, Ros Ode to Lulu:
Mourvdre based wine with a lovely fragrance, a dry, mineral driven palate, and a dry finish. In the Bandol style and quite nice with summer grilled veggies.

Reds:

2002 Clos Roche Blanche, Gamay:
Ive had a few bad bottles of this but this one is quintessential gamay charming, complete, moderate weight and good sustain. A really lovely bottle after all these years.

2005 Georges Vigouroux, Cahors Pigmentum:
Malbec that is blurry, earthy/dirty, unfocused and just not very good. If theres nothing else . . . 12.5% and about $10.

2007 Lurton, Malbec:
Industrial grade not objectionable but no better than something to drink if youve nothing else. About $9.

2008 Maipe, Malbec:
So much better that the last two malbecs that one might think it was a different grape; this shows the darker side of the variety but with balance and some finesse; drinking well now and very good with a bean, chard, turkey and quinoa stew. 14% alcohol and about $12.
(Aside: it seems the feminine, aromatic, elegant side of this variety is rare. And honestly, going up in price usually just gets me more wood or more power, neither of which I find attractive. The potential of this grape is considerable in that I have tasted occasional wines that reminded me of great pinot light, pure, scented and such beautiful textures ah, where are they when you need them?)

Best, Jim
 
Re: malbec, it makes some lovely, feminine (by your definition) wines in New Zealand, where it -- rather than cabernet franc -- is the preferred third blending partner in Bordeaux-style blends. It also makes bruisers at some addresses, but these are far less common. More relevantly, it's almost never bottled alone, so it's difficult to say what could happen in isolation; barrel tastes are all one gets.

Sue Courtney is a special fan of the grape, and can be guaranteed to give a good eye-roll when she tastes a quality barrel sample.
 
I plan on changing that.
Best of luck. Here's a place where our tastes seem to diverge, based on your enthusiasm for some of the Argentine malbecs, so I'll be interested to see what you come up with.
 
originally posted by Thor:
I plan on changing that.
Best of luck. Here's a place where our tastes seem to diverge, based on your enthusiasm for some of the Argentine malbecs, so I'll be interested to see what you come up with.

You know, I think most people get into making wine hoping others will like what they produce. And I can't say that isn't a factor for me.
But more important is to create the kind of interest you mention - to alter the paradigm, if only slightly.
So, thanks for the interest.
Best, Jim
 
2007 Georges Vigouroux, Cahors Gouleyant 13.0%
Plastic cork, the word malbec vulgarly on the label, only the 13% and the Astrixish name to recommend it. Bretty, smoky, leathery, hint of blackberry. Acid stronger than fruit, with tarry and unpleasantly bitter residuals. Pleasure bordering on zippo. Two strikes against this producer, who has the gall bladder to write "C'est notre vin de l'anne" on the label below the disingenuous moniker Gouleyant. Ptuitary.
 
Vigouroux is one of the larger producers in Cahors, with lots of cheap wines shading towards the drecky side. I've had better luck with the Gouleyant but it's still nothing special. The Pigmentum is crap.

For the more floral and unspoofed Cahors I like the Jouffreau family's Clos de Gamot and Chateau de Cayrou best. Cosse-Maisonneuve also makes nice Cahors, and older Triguedina can be special. Chateau de Gaudou's basic cuvee is nice as well.
 
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