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Florida Jim

Florida Jim
2009 Baudry, Chinon Ros:
13%, bone dry, clean, crisp and well flavored; a wine I have written about before and one that continues to impress. Charming.

2004 Alfasi, Merlot Reserve:
$6, 13%, from Chile, imported by Royal Wine Corp, NY, NY; baked earth and red fruit nose sort of reminds me of aged Rioja, some bottle bouquet; gentle and complex on the palate, slightly earthy but not dirty, balanced, shows an aged character and finishes with an earthy tang.
You could serve this wine to me blind and merlot is one of the last guesses Id have. Enough ripe fruit to please the fruit seekers, enough earthy complexity to please the terroirists, and, an absence of that dirty note that many wines from Chile seem to have. All for $6 an over-achiever that is certainly worth a buy.

N/V Le Lupin, Multiplicity:
14.5% abv, this is a Rabbit Ridge, Paso field blend but smells and tastes like it starts with zinfandel; reminds of Dago red but with less of a rustic character; sort of disjointed but friendly, quite aromatic and meant for burgers. $9 retail curiously, $6/bottle and $60/case on the website.

2005 Josmeyer, Pinot Blanc Mise de Printemps:
$12, 12% abv; not quite ripe apricots on the nose along with the smell of the white grape juice my Dad used to get from the table grapes he grew; in the mouth, much the same with an underlying mineral water note. Pleasant wine that went well with a pasta prima vera.

2005 Chteau dEpire, Savennires Cuve Spciale:
14% abv, $19; so much better than at release as to be a completely different wine; very expansive nose that is beyond complex and into the realm of ethereal chamomile, flowers, honey, quince, citrus zest, minerals, bitter almond and pineapple all very fresh and brisk; flavors follow the nose with additions of anise and apricot, slightly honeyed, viscous but not cloying, bright and fresh and nervous, intense, compact, balanced and quite long. What was once a closed, stinky and disjointed duckling is now a swan and, judging from the improvement, may become a Phoenix. Character driven and still quite obviously, young.
Beautiful with fresh herbed goat cheese and crackers.

Best, Jim
 
originally posted by Florida Jim:

2005 Chteau dEpire, Savennires Cuve Spciale:
14% abv, $19; so much better than at release as to be a completely different wine; very expansive nose that is beyond complex and into the realm of ethereal chamomile, flowers, honey, quince, citrus zest, minerals, bitter almond and pineapple all very fresh and brisk; flavors follow the nose with additions of anise and apricot, slightly honeyed, viscous but not cloying, bright and fresh and nervous, intense, compact, balanced and quite long. What was once a closed, stinky and disjointed duckling is now a swan and, judging from the improvement, may become a Phoenix. Character driven and still quite obviously, young.
Beautiful with fresh herbed goat cheese and crackers.

Best, Jim

Thanks for the update on this wine. I've got several at a storage facility about 45 minutes away.
Might have to make a trek up there and bring one or two home.

iirc, you had mixed feeling about this wine in it's very early stages. patience is paying off i guess.
 
originally posted by Bill Lundstrom:
iirc, you had mixed feeling about this wine in it's very early stages. patience is paying off i guess.
Hence, the duckling/swan/Phoenix bit.
Lots of years to go, as well.
Best, Jim
 
Joe,
I found none noticeable.
The nose was focused and discrete despite being powerful. I suspect there is more to come as the bouquet picks-up bottle age.
Not yet as unbounded as the '96 Closel, Speciale - but then, what is?
Best, Jim
 
originally posted by Florida Jim:

Not yet as unbounded as the '96 Closel, Speciale - but then, what is?
I brought one of those to a party last week. Universal acclaim, and I was the only geek there.
 
originally posted by SFJoe:
originally posted by Florida Jim:

Not yet as unbounded as the '96 Closel, Speciale - but then, what is?
I brought one of those to a party last week. Universal acclaim, and I was the only geek there.

I suspect you were the only *wine* geek there.
 
originally posted by Scott Kraft:
originally posted by SFJoe:
originally posted by Florida Jim:

Not yet as unbounded as the '96 Closel, Speciale - but then, what is?
I brought one of those to a party last week. Universal acclaim, and I was the only geek there.

I suspect you were the only *wine* geek there.
Ow! Hurt me!

Not just me, but my friends and the horse I rode in on.

But in truth, we even had the token marketing maven.
 
originally posted by SFJoe:
We are totally pulling your leg.
Heart be still.
The last time I saw the younger she sported a razor blade on a chain around her neck. I could imagine her being interested in piercings.
Which makes me weak in the knees . . .
Best, Jim
 
originally posted by Florida Jim:
originally posted by SFJoe:
We are totally pulling your leg.
Heart be still.
The last time I saw the younger she sported a razor blade on a chain around her neck. I could imagine her being interested in piercings.
Which makes me weak in the knees . . .
Best, Jim

Piercings make me weak in the knees too, Jim, but probably for reasons other than your own. One need look no farther to recognize why the doctorate after my name has a Ph and not an M.

Mark Lipton
 
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