originally posted by Claude Kolm:
I own plenty of Clape, Allemand, and Verset, the first and last going back to 1983, Allemand only to 1994, all bought on release (except the 1983 Verset which came, years later, from the property). I love them all (except 1997 Clape, which I deliberately do not own) and suggest that if M. Miller (whose taste I admire) thinks Clape is boring, he's not sampled from the same wines I have (I must have just about 35 vintages of Clape under my belt -- but there are at least two cuves/vintage).
It was actually his terroir at the southern end of Cornas which is different from the rest of Cornas, thereby yielding a lighter style of wine. Stphane Robert/Domaine du Tunnel has the vines now and also has done additional planting in that sector.originally posted by Yixin:
Juge is Juge, not Cornas.
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
It was actually his terroir at the southern end of Cornas which is different from the rest of Cornas, thereby yielding a lighter style of wine. Stphane Robert/Domaine du Tunnel has the vines now and also has done additional planting in that sector.originally posted by Yixin:
Juge is Juge, not Cornas.
I'm trying to decide whether to add Vincent Paris to my cellar. He or Robert?
What about this Balthazaar guy that Josh liked.
originally posted by MarkS:
I'm trying to decide whether to add Vincent Paris to my cellar. He or Robert?
What about this Balthazaar guy that Josh liked.
Well, I can give you the long answer: ask me in about 10 years, but - like most students in life - you didn't want to here that. As long as we are injecting vignerons in this Cornas thread, what say the citizens of Durand's? From what I've read, they appear modern, but are they any good?
originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
It was actually his terroir at the southern end of Cornas which is different from the rest of Cornas, thereby yielding a lighter style of wine. Stphane Robert/Domaine du Tunnel has the vines now and also has done additional planting in that sector.originally posted by Yixin:
Juge is Juge, not Cornas.
I'm trying to decide whether to add Vincent Paris to my cellar. He or Robert?
What about this Balthazaar guy that Josh liked.
originally posted by scottreiner:
originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
It was actually his terroir at the southern end of Cornas which is different from the rest of Cornas, thereby yielding a lighter style of wine. Stphane Robert/Domaine du Tunnel has the vines now and also has done additional planting in that sector.originally posted by Yixin:
Juge is Juge, not Cornas.
I'm trying to decide whether to add Vincent Paris to my cellar. He or Robert?
What about this Balthazaar guy that Josh liked.
robert michel's wines are (were) amazing. i believe vincent paris got all his vines, but i am not a fan.
As with my I-never-made-them statements on aged riesling, you have a quaint historical view of what I've said.Thor and Larry Stein may want to jump in -- they've both had Clape from my cellar; I think Steve Edmunds, too. Thor, when I first met him, expressed the opinion that Cornas was on the same level as Crozes-Hermitage, an opinion that I think he has been disabused of.
Dere ain't none (although to be fair, Robert is working in much riper vintages; if you look at what Juge did in a ripe vintage for the time, such as 1989, the wines were atypical for him at the time.originally posted by Yixin:
Not sure VA is baked into Southern Cornas terroir (only half-joking).
And I don't see the family resemblance between Robert and Juge.
Bathazar is good in elegant style. Uses demi-muids, very traditional.originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by MarkS:
I'm trying to decide whether to add Vincent Paris to my cellar. He or Robert?
What about this Balthazaar guy that Josh liked.
Well, I can give you the long answer: ask me in about 10 years, but - like most students in life - you didn't want to here that. As long as we are injecting vignerons in this Cornas thread, what say the citizens of Durand's? From what I've read, they appear modern, but are they any good?
Durand is terrible. I bought some, they seemed OK at the time. They weren't. The 1998s have also totally fallen apart in bottle.
originally posted by Larry Stein:
A few years ago, my tasting group had a Verset Vertical (does look nice on the page, doesn't it?). 1985-1997. All of the wines were quite nice, with '85 and '88 head and shoulders above the others. I was lucky enough to be able to purchase one bottle of each from the organizer. Thor, Theresa and I drank the '85 at Manresa. It was stellar.
Interesting choice. Very atypical wines for the region because of their high acidity.originally posted by SFJoe:
All of this persuaded me to open '96 Clape (grey market) tonight. It's not the most electric wine of my existence, but it's awfully congenial. Fine structure, fine harmony, a little mix of wild and a hint of green.
Pretty damn good.