CWD; M. Catoir Sptlese halbtrocken Scheurebe

drssouth

Stephen South
1989er Weingut Mller-Catoir Haardter Mandelring Scheurebe Sptlese halbtrocken, AP Nmr 3 174 079 11 90 , alc 11.4%...a little petrol on the nosegrapefruit rind on the nose as wellthe palate screams pink grapefruit and it is followed by tangerine....the finish gets less sweet and intensifies...a very complex and interesting wine...

Amazing with almond flour coated seared scallops with a mint/almond sauce...WOW
 
originally posted by David M. Bueker:
21 year old Scheurebe - don't see that very often.

We are at Jeff and Dena Morris's having dinner...you know their cellar has many things you "don't see very often"...
 
Matching a rather obscure 21 year old wine (that about 15 people in the world would age that long - confession, I would be one of the 15) with a somewhat unusual, if delicious sounding preparation is essentially a parlor trick. It's good that it worked out, but not something that is a likely outcome.
 
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originally posted by David M. Bueker:
Matching a rather obscure 21 year old wine (that about 15 people in the world would age that long - confession, I would be one of the 15) with a somewhat unusual, if delicious sounding preparation is essentially a parlor trick. It's good that it worked out, but not something that is a likely outcome.

Are there really only 15? I just drank the last of my M-C Scheu from '76 a few years ago...
 
I had a bottle of the '89 and '90 that I opened w/in the past year. Unfortunately one was corked (can't remember offhand which), but the other was transcendent.

David, I'm not so sure such things are parlor tricks- unless by unlikely you're referring to their difficulty in reproducing due to access of materials. Sure, there's unusual things going on in both, but it's not hard to see why it might be brilliant together.

I can see SFJoe's Gravner, too- especially Ribolla Gialla. A Goldmuskateller (same grape) from the Alto Adige or Shrock's dry Furmint would have been my recommendation for things I have in stock right now in the store, for similar reasons to why I think the Scheu worked. There's that glycerine weight, minty musky spice, good acid, etc. The amphora prep w/ the Gravner would be an interesting twist- the skin tannin and the sharp herbal can work. In another direction but similar umami/bitter vs. orange wine, I recently did Coenobium Rusticum w/ lean flank steak, bright tomatoes, and chimichurri that worked well.
 
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