originally posted by Lyle Fass:
originally posted by SFJoe:
Lots of info on 2009 BdxNice detailed summary here. Wish I could bring myself to care more.
There are support groups.
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
No one gets my Jo Landron pun. I must turn in my Thor epaulettes.
originally posted by Jay Miller:
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
Nonetheless, I look forward, no later than this Monday, to reporting back to all here my extremely, extremely Bordeaux-attuned impressions of the following 2009s:
Chteau Coutet, Chteau D'Aiguilhe, Chteau Camensac, Chteau La Lagune, Chteau Sociando-Mallet, Demoiselle de Sociando Mallet, Chteau Fourcas Dupr, Chteau Brane-Cantenac, Baron de Brane, Chteau dIssan, Blason dIssan, Chteau du Tertre, Chteau Ferrire, Chteau Giscours, La Sirne de Giscours, Chteau La Gurgue, Chteau Chasse Spleen, Chteau Haut-Bages Libral, Chteau Carbonnieux, Chteau Malartic-Lagravire, Chteau Les Carmes Haut-Brion, Chteau Beauregard, Chteau La Conseillante, Duo de La Conseillante, Chteau Canon La Gaffeliere, Chteau Lafon Rochet, Chteau Le Crock, Chteau Beychevelle, Chteau Lagrange, Les Fiefs de Lagrange, Chteau Langoa Barton, Chteau Loville Barton, Chteau Loville Poyferr, Chteau Moulin Riche, Chteau Bastor-Lamontagne, Chteau Marquis de Terme.
And I promise I won't simply say "tastes like claret."
all those wines and none of them taste like claret? that is depressing.
It's not worth a hooey.originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
No additional information forthcoming on Le Crock?
Funnily enough, they all tasted like claret.
The boss overall (Spain, France, Switzerland) is Marie-Louise Banyols, a well-known taster (to Revue du Vin de France readers) and former sommelire, who is as much in love with 'natural wines' as Sibard or anyone on this bored. So no fear there: her heart and tastebuds are in the right place. OTOH, I think there might be a more mundane reason behind what does seem like slippage: the overall, lousy European economy (Spain in particular, of course), which may be hurting Lavinia's business fundamentals... I hope not, but that's the concern around here.originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
buying for Lavinia used to be done by Caves Aug's genial Marc Sibard (whence the curious similarity between their catalogues of yore, price being one good wedge to tell 'em apart); now I don't know who does, but I've been noticing increasing slippage, erosion, perhaps a coming landslide.
originally posted by SFJoe: I'd say the French selection at the Paris branch has collapsed. It used to thrill me, and now it's hard to find anything I want to buy. At a range of price levels.
Not when I was last there. The handful of good wines seemed liked remnants.originally posted by Rahsaan:
originally posted by SFJoe: I'd say the French selection at the Paris branch has collapsed. It used to thrill me, and now it's hard to find anything I want to buy. At a range of price levels.
I can't track this stuff as closely as some (Sharon!) but my interest in Lavinia has also weakened since it first opened.
But in the past couple of years I remember their Loire section was still pretty stocked with multiple cuvees of Huet, Foreau, Angeli, Foucault, Breton, Puzelat, Belliviere. Is that no longer the case? Or is that just about the extent of their thrilling wines?
originally posted by SFJoe:
Long gone the days of '73 CSH or '19 LHL, to take two real examples.
Not to mention, long gone the Angeli, Foucault, and anything from Breton, Puzelat or Belleviere that you wouldn't also find anywhere in town. But really not much of that caliber. More likely a lowly cuvee from Thierry Germain or Henri Marionnet..