Jonathan Loesberg
Jonathan Loesberg
originally posted by Kay Bixler:
Jonathan Loesberg is the glue that holds this place together.
And that's not just the booze talking!
Would you be amenable to writing this in a letter to my dean?
originally posted by Kay Bixler:
Jonathan Loesberg is the glue that holds this place together.
And that's not just the booze talking!
Would you be amenable to writing this in a letter to my dean?
originally posted by Rahsaan:
Would you be amenable to writing this in a letter to my dean?
As evidence that you spend/waste too much time in non-teaching or resarch matters?
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
I figure that being the glue that holds a wine bored together (I guess by writing parodies of the fat doctor)should count as some form of social impact.
originally posted by Rahsaan:
They were happy about the Le Monde article and it's good to hear that I can also include my wine board participation in the tenure file. I'll be sure to include all sorts of statistics on posts per day, etc. And thank Professor Loesberg all the way!
originally posted by Rahsaan:
I have so much to learn!
But, there are "citation" statistics for how often one's posts get referenced/responses.
Officially it was 1987, IRRC, but I'm sure Gaston was still at her side for the first several years (I didn't start visiting until the early 1990s).originally posted by Mark Davis:
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
1985 Cras, for the record, was from Ghislaine's father, Gaston. But are you sure of its storage history? A 1985 I had 5-6 years ago (may have been Charmes instead of Cras?) was mind-boggling.originally posted by Mark Davis:
originally posted by VLM:
FWIW, as much as I love Barthod, my faith isn't what it was 10-15 years ago (yes, Jim, it's been that long). I've never lost faith in the Mugneret sisters. Spend your Chambolle money there, and we'll experiment with my Barthod.
I'm also a huge fan of Barthod...and I've had some bad bottles too (a recent '85 Cras did *not* show well..it seemed dead)..
Give the wines another chance...the entire lineup is stellar IMO.
-mark
K&L...so no, not sure of the history...Ghislaine took over in '87, right?
-mark
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
originally posted by Rahsaan:
I have so much to learn!
But, there are "citation" statistics for how often one's posts get referenced/responses.
It's in a special subsection of the Arts and Humanities Citation Index. But since you're a social scientist, I expect those statistics won't do you any good.
originally posted by Bwood:
I prefer even the higher end Luneau-Papin wines sooner rather than later. I think, for instance, that the '02s were a bit better a couple years ago than they are today.
originally posted by MLipton:
originally posted by Bwood:
I prefer even the higher end Luneau-Papin wines sooner rather than later. I think, for instance, that the '02s were a bit better a couple years ago than they are today.
Horses for courses, jb. Aged Muscadet is such a different wine from young Muscadet that I find it hard to compare the two. As with many other white wines, it seems to me that there's a bimodal sort of experience at work: drink 'em young or with serious age, but not in between.
Mark Lipton
originally posted by Florida Jim:
Ups and downs
1999 Barthod, Chambolle-Musigny Les Fues:
(...)
I have just about had enough of this producer I hear great things and people say how much they wish she had some grand cru terroir. Baloney. This may be the only wine Ive had from Barthod that has been open enough to enjoy and this is simple and unremarkable. And the prices being charged these days! somebody else can pay them no more of my money is spent at this house.
Best, Jim
originally posted by MLipton:
Horses for courses, jb. Aged Muscadet is such a different wine from young Muscadet that I find it hard to compare the two. As with many other white wines, it seems to me that there's a bimodal sort of experience at work: drink 'em young or with serious age, but not in between.
Mark Lipton
originally posted by Bwood:
. . . Enbergian "oh my" moments.
originally posted by Marc D:
The '89 L d'Or was an Oh My moment.
So was the 2004 version, but it needed 24 hours of air to get there.
Briords has been great young, old and in between.
I've yet to catch the Granite de Clisson at a happy moment, but have hope for future bottles.