Salil was in the Boston area so that meant we found ourselves having dinner at my place. He was happy and ready to open the 2007 AJ Adam Dhron Hofberg Riesling that he had been praising and it showed very well. It started out as quite the curious beast that was juicy and succulent but also restrained, sort of in-between the drier and off-dry riesling styles that are more common. With air it firmed up nicely showing a very confident and almost stern profile but with the florals and flavors that reminded me of ripe fun Mosel. Interesting and tasty.
The 2002 Alzinger Steinertal Grner Veltliner Smaragd did not hold the same interest as it started out with the waxy and golden notes I remembered from a previous bottle but then the finish started tasting oxidized and slightly damaged. What a shame. The previous bottle was fun fun fun.
But we were not lacking wine and with the main course mushroom pizza we moved to the 1995 Bernard Baudry Chinon Cuve Signature which was my last bottle and remained true to what I have expected over the years from the wine. Dark fruit, crisp cool vegetal edges, and still a good amount of structure. This seemed to be perfect drinking for me and I have no idea where it is going from here but I will need someone elses bottles to find out.
Salil was eager for more riesling so we opened a bottle of his haul-of-the-day which was the 2004 Diel Dorsheimer Burgberg Riesling Sptlese. It started off (plenty) sweet and slightly simple but with air it firmed up and was a very pleasant and easy-drinking wine. Apparently Salil purchased it on sale, marked down from $40 to $20. I think we both agreed that at $40 it would be bad value but for $20 it was fun to open and enjoy. And that we did.
The 2002 Alzinger Steinertal Grner Veltliner Smaragd did not hold the same interest as it started out with the waxy and golden notes I remembered from a previous bottle but then the finish started tasting oxidized and slightly damaged. What a shame. The previous bottle was fun fun fun.
But we were not lacking wine and with the main course mushroom pizza we moved to the 1995 Bernard Baudry Chinon Cuve Signature which was my last bottle and remained true to what I have expected over the years from the wine. Dark fruit, crisp cool vegetal edges, and still a good amount of structure. This seemed to be perfect drinking for me and I have no idea where it is going from here but I will need someone elses bottles to find out.
Salil was eager for more riesling so we opened a bottle of his haul-of-the-day which was the 2004 Diel Dorsheimer Burgberg Riesling Sptlese. It started off (plenty) sweet and slightly simple but with air it firmed up and was a very pleasant and easy-drinking wine. Apparently Salil purchased it on sale, marked down from $40 to $20. I think we both agreed that at $40 it would be bad value but for $20 it was fun to open and enjoy. And that we did.