originally posted by Brzme:
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
Michel Bettane once observed that wines of the Rhne rarely suffer the closing-up phases that one so frequently encounters in Burgundies and Bordeaux, and I agree with him completely on that.
Claude
I have always thought of Clape as one of the first modernists from the northern Rhone.
I bought a lot of his wines from the 80s and 90s, and admit that I sold most of them. Not really my style, especially compared Verset and Juge. I remember clearly Jean Clusel in the early 80s saying that Clape was making Cornas as a Bordeaux...I wouldn't go that far.
I rarely share Bettane views, especially when it comes to Northern Rhone or Burgundy.
I don't share that one either.
This is far from my personal experience, especially for Gentaz, Chol, Juge or Verset even Chave I would say. I don't know a lot of people who really enjoyed 1991s 5 years after bottling.
88 Grandes Places from CLusel is now a lovely bottle of wine. But I wasted at least 6 bottles in the past 15 years hoping the potential showed in the barrel was beginning to point out. My first good one was 2-3 years ago only, and I wouldn't touch any magmum.
I have to admit that I don't enjoy black fruit or bacon in a Northern Rhone wine, and have a hard time when they begin to loose that fruit and taste oaky with this kind of bitterness all the modernist are fighting by using new oak or more recently added roasted grape tannin preparations.
I don't see even one 2005 I could enjoy today. We tasted something like 65 of them in Chavanay during the March last December, and they were really all painful and gross for my taste.
Southern rhone wines very rarely close up , I agree. Even whole cluster.
My .02 centimes
Eric