Ah uhm

Joel Stewart

Joel Stewart
2001 Fattoria di Magliano, Poggio Bestiale, IGT, Rosso della Maremma, Tuscany, 14% -I did well at an exhibition years ago in Tokyo and while on lunch break during the show, went into the upscale supermarket next door and tasted this in the wine department. I liked it and bought a few bottles. This is the last bottle and, despite my change of palate over the years, it's surprisingly good still. Which is to say (now) that it's not bad for a spoofed, micro-filtered Bordeaux blend in the super Tuscan style. Merlot, cab s., cab f. and petit verdot are all present; clean, rich, loamy nose, and not quite opaque in the glass; a decent enough balance between fruit, earth and tannic structure that's hard to not enjoy despite all the sins made to arrive here. There's really nothing gross or over-stated (with air the fruit pushes forward maybe a bit much), but heck, for a rainy Sunday afternoon doing accounting, a reasonably elegant wine in the modern mode...and it makes me wish for rack of lamb. Life could be a lot worse.

2006 Kreydenwiess, Barbabelle, Costieres De Nimes, 13.5% - Biodynamic. Grenache, carignan, cinsault blend. This is a pleasant surprise...I swear the palate and nose first reminded me at moments of either several different Puzelat reds or Lapierre's 07 Beaujolais. It is that sameness of vin naturelness that has been discussed here before, but one slight diff here is that there's a tad more fruit...really just a tad. I'd be curious to know how MK pulled this (unripeness) off in the southern Rhone. Violets, sour cherry aromas and a whiff of horsey. Bright saline cherry on the attack that expands without weight...and only a sweetish tannic kick on the back end that tips it toward the Rhone. A tiny flashing light of fruit in the center.....a small core, but it's there. I really like this stuff. Want an elkburger with this. Thanks for the tip-off, Thor.

2008 Coste Piane, Prosecco frizzante sur lie, Veneto - From a magnum and it's really too bad I didn't pull the trigger on the jeroboam, given how quickly this disappeared. Appley nose, luminous, milky jade in the glass, gorgeous persistent prickle and layers of depth underneath that covered ground from the best vinho verde's to the deeper shades of aged muscadets. Very long and one of those wines that is like the best of pop songs, a la Stevie Wonder. Go back again and again.

2007 Chateau Cambon, Le Cambon, Beaujolais - I know this is the product of a partnership between M. Lapierre and another vintner, but can someone explain why this wine is so fat and huge? Not to say that I don't like it, but between this and the rose (which I like better) there is some serious viscosity going on here...like this is a 14% off dry gamay. Lord knows what would happen if this super bojo got in the wrong hands. In the end, a bit too sweet and pendulous for me.
 
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
Notes from the Marketing DepartmentPoggio Bestiale, hard to beat that name. Except maybe with Barbabelle.

"Animal hillside" is as far as I got with the former, and having seen the latest retro-hat-tipping Wolfman movie, I don't know, it sort of makes sense. O, you've got something better?

And as for the latter, aren't Berbabelles handweights for girly dolls?

PS- I should add, for the uninitiated, that Kreydenwiess is mainly a bio-d winemaker from Alsace, and that's what caught my attention (was going to title the post something like North by Southwest, but then I forgot). Seems he is capable of holding back the heat in his southern properties....somehow. Maybe this is why FJim found some people mistaking syrah for gamay somewhere along the way?
 
In general, Kreydenweiss' southern properties don't taste like "natural wines" with all the carbonic teenagerness, and so your experience is surprising (I haven't had that wine yet), but they do most definitely reveal restraint. Even the 2003s were quite drinkable, if one doesn't mind a bit of lead in their wine.
 
originally posted by Thor:
In general, Kreydenweiss' southern properties don't taste like "natural wines" with all the carbonic teenagerness, and so your experience is surprising (I haven't had that wine yet), but they do most definitely reveal restraint. Even the 2003s were quite drinkable, if one doesn't mind a bit of lead in their wine.

Does Puzelat use carbonic maceration with some of his reds? I was thinking more along the lines of spontaneous fermentations and/or other more or less biodynamic winemaking techniques bringing about the similarity. I should repeat though that a lot of these traits dissipated somewhat with more aeration.
 
Back
Top