robert ames
robert ames
i just had my only bottle of 1996 joseph drouhin les clos grand cru chablis (purchased on release), and of course as the years have gone by with all horror stories of premature oxidation, i was concerned that i had held my card too long.
come to find out, it was just the opposite (supporting the truism that if you have only one bottle of something that you want to age, you will inevitably open it at the wrong time). upon opening, the wine was tight and primary, with mainly just loads of clean lemonliness. as the bottle warmed and the kumomotos went down, it came out of its shell and showed plenty of chablis minerality, but it never made it past the budding phase into full bloom where the richness of grand cru should reign.
the 1996 krug later in the evening was far more captivating (indeed, it was a BIG wow, as expected), yet at the same time much younger (duh).
hic.
come to find out, it was just the opposite (supporting the truism that if you have only one bottle of something that you want to age, you will inevitably open it at the wrong time). upon opening, the wine was tight and primary, with mainly just loads of clean lemonliness. as the bottle warmed and the kumomotos went down, it came out of its shell and showed plenty of chablis minerality, but it never made it past the budding phase into full bloom where the richness of grand cru should reign.
the 1996 krug later in the evening was far more captivating (indeed, it was a BIG wow, as expected), yet at the same time much younger (duh).
hic.