originally posted by VS:
You mean Clos Roche Blanche Sauvignon Blanc?
This web site is so user-friendly... For Loire and Jura geeks, that is. But don't worry. The rest of us folks, we're slowly catching up.
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
I prefer it to some of the nicknames wines get elsewhere, I have to say. Though at first my decoder ring was slow to turn.
Telegraphic acronyms are the way of the future, I now firmly believe. I almost told Rahsaan in another thread that one great fish pairing I'd had was monkfish with black chanterelles and 85 LdH VT GR. But maybe it would have been better with a nice Corton Charlie. Or a Moose?
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
I prefer it to some of the nicknames wines get elsewhere, I have to say. Though at first my decoder ring was slow to turn.
Telegraphic acronyms are the way of the future, I now firmly believe. I almost told Rahsaan in another thread that one great fish pairing I'd had was monkfish with black chanterelles and 85 LdH VT GR. But maybe it would have been better with a nice Corton Charlie. Or a Moose?
Cory, is that you?originally posted by David M. Bueker:
I thought this was about wine. Then I found out it was about Sauvignon Blanc.
I don't remember being so fond of the '03 in the early days.originally posted by JasonA:
2009 vs. 2003I know we are talking apples and oranges in a sense but I remember the initial reaction to '03's was one of a lot of POW's and WOW's. Are these '09"s going to be age worthy or should we just drink them up right now before we tire of them or they tire of themselves?
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
Go, SB!It's crack wine.
"LdH VT GR" is a tolerable abbreviation in my book, although without any advantages over simply writing "Tondonia," which is actually one fewer keystroke and several fewer syllables. (The "LdH" clearly goes without saying, and the "GR" can be inferred from the vintage with reasonable accuracy.) I draw the line, however, at things like Corton-Charlie, Moose, or, worst of all, "the Ducster." Corton-Charlemagne and Musigny are two of the most euphonious names in all of wine, and are bona fide nobility, too. (Whenever I hear "Musigny" I think "That music always round me . . ." --Whitman.) They deserve respect!originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
I prefer it to some of the nicknames wines get elsewhere, I have to say. Though at first my decoder ring was slow to turn.
Telegraphic acronyms are the way of the future, I now firmly believe. I almost told Rahsaan in another thread that one great fish pairing I'd had was monkfish with black chanterelles and 85 LdH VT GR. But maybe it would have been better with a nice Corton Charlie. Or a Moose?
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
"LdH VT GR" is a tolerable abbreviation in my book, although without any advantages over simply writing "Tondonia," which is actually one fewer keystroke and several fewer syllables. (The "LdH" clearly goes without saying, and the "GR" can be inferred from the vintage with reasonable accuracy.) I draw the line, however, at things like Corton-Charlie, Moose, or, worst of all, "the Ducster." Corton-Charlemagne and Musigny are two of the most euphonious names in all of wine, and are bona fide nobility, too. (Whenever I hear "Musigny" I think "That music always round me . . ." --Whitman.) They deserve respect!originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
I prefer it to some of the nicknames wines get elsewhere, I have to say. Though at first my decoder ring was slow to turn.
Telegraphic acronyms are the way of the future, I now firmly believe. I almost told Rahsaan in another thread that one great fish pairing I'd had was monkfish with black chanterelles and 85 LdH VT GR. But maybe it would have been better with a nice Corton Charlie. Or a Moose?
What is the common current vulgarity for Les Amoureuses?
My apologies.originally posted by VS:
You mean Clos Roche Blanche Sauvignon Blanc?
This web site is so user-friendly... For Loire and Jura geeks, that is. But don't worry. The rest of us folks, we're slowly catching up.