Florida Jim
Florida Jim
I went to a zinfandel tasting last night. More specifically, those zins. rated the best by the Wine Spectator this year. Such a tasting is a bit foreign to me; first, I do not receive nor have much interest in the Wine Spectator, and; second, I havent a single bottle of zinfandel in my cellar.
But the people that were gathering are a great group, the house where it was held is comfortable and the food was stellar.
I did not take down vintages or exact labels but the producers involved included Novy, Charlisle, Seghisio, Valdez, Chronicle, Four Vines, Lamborn Family, Turley, Sausal, Orin Swift and Linnae Colado (please, forgive me misspellings, I dont know many of these names and was writing them down phonetically.
No major revelations here I learned once again why I dont buy this grape and I learned once again that these wines are much too alcoholic for me. The best of the lot (for me) was the Four Vines and it turns out to be the least expensive wine in the line-up. I wasnt surprised.
After the tasting finished, a magnum of 2000 Harlan Estate, Cabernet Sauvignon was opened. A thousand dollar plus bottle at retail, heaven knows what it sells for at auction.
It was very oaky, monolithic, tannic, short and had a very small amount of VA. There was nothing about it I liked but, considering the vintage, it was probably not the best bottle of Harlan to open for immediate consumption.
It struck me that had we sold the magnum we could have paid for the tasting several times over.
Or, we could have sold the lot and found something really good to buy in quantity.
Sigh . . .
Best, Jim
But the people that were gathering are a great group, the house where it was held is comfortable and the food was stellar.
I did not take down vintages or exact labels but the producers involved included Novy, Charlisle, Seghisio, Valdez, Chronicle, Four Vines, Lamborn Family, Turley, Sausal, Orin Swift and Linnae Colado (please, forgive me misspellings, I dont know many of these names and was writing them down phonetically.
No major revelations here I learned once again why I dont buy this grape and I learned once again that these wines are much too alcoholic for me. The best of the lot (for me) was the Four Vines and it turns out to be the least expensive wine in the line-up. I wasnt surprised.
After the tasting finished, a magnum of 2000 Harlan Estate, Cabernet Sauvignon was opened. A thousand dollar plus bottle at retail, heaven knows what it sells for at auction.
It was very oaky, monolithic, tannic, short and had a very small amount of VA. There was nothing about it I liked but, considering the vintage, it was probably not the best bottle of Harlan to open for immediate consumption.
It struck me that had we sold the magnum we could have paid for the tasting several times over.
Or, we could have sold the lot and found something really good to buy in quantity.
Sigh . . .
Best, Jim