Levi is a noted Ornellaia hoarder.Levi, are you listening?
Levi is a noted Ornellaia hoarder.Levi, are you listening?
originally posted by Lyle Fass:
Did someone mention '96 Masetto being good. If so . .+1.
The '90 Tignanello was one of the first high-end wines I ever had, and I remember loving it. Had all sorts of cognitive dissonance for years before I realized it was an outlier rather than a benchmark.originally posted by Bwood:
Other super-tuscans that I don't have and would sell but are (or were a few years ago) also really excellent wines--1990 Tignanello and 1988 Solaia.
originally posted by Bwood:
I'd sell any bottles of Masseto I had and buy case of assorted other italian wines or a case of Montevertine. But despite being enormously overpriced for my personal budget, the '95 and '96 are worth at least trying once.
Zul referred to the wine as "Massesexyo", which always struck me as a little out of character.
Other super-tuscans that I don't have and would sell but are (or were a few years ago) also really excellent wines--1990 Tignanello and 1988 Solaia.
originally posted by Alice F.:
Scott, you reported that they only use indigenous yeasts. Surprises me greatly. Who told you this? And do you know if they meant they let it start by itself and then they inoculate?
originally posted by Alice F.:
Scott, you reported that they only use indigenous yeasts. Surprises me greatly. Who told you this? And do you know if they meant they let it start by itself and then they inoculate?
originally posted by Lyle Fass:
I would not be surprised at all that Ornellaia uses indigenous yeasts. I am always to find out some trophy wine or wine I don't like uses native yeasts. Had many a-ha moments like that in my years in the Biz.
And Scott? What kind of "determination" is made? Sounds kind of like winemaker hokum to me.