originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
I hate to be a stick in anyone's wheel (but should feel safe from lashings, hereabouts, as the stakes require some kind of microscope), but I don't feel Chteauneuf is for aging. Really, I see not the interest in such.* So the contention that Cairanne and Vacqueyras (lovely appellations that no one ever, ever talks about) are for younger drinking seems moot, to me. You can't drink a good C. or V. at under 5 years, so the difference between them and CdP is hairsplittin'.
You raise an interesting point, Sharon. Putting aside for the moment the sniping of those who don't care for Grenache full stop, your point is one that I've heard before but don't agree with at all. To me, the beauty of CdP and, by extension, Grenache, is the "femininity" it takes on with sufficient bottle age. To me, there is possibly no better match with smoked game birds than older CdP, which take on a silky presence and aromatic qualities that I love. In a weird way, it's a bit to me like the transformation undergone by Nebbiolo upon aging, though in Nebbiolo it's a far more dramatic shift.
YMMV of course (is that French?)
Mark Lipton