Joel Stewart
Joel Stewart
I was going to start this with several pages about how the sky, in the last 2 days, has suddenly changed here in Kyoto....bringing on an intense focused light and a piercing clarity on any object it lands. Deep palapable shadows that one can look into and find other details. When one is overly hot, such details are good to remember, because looking into shadows, slowly, can cool the mind. But since my wife let me know that this atmospheric change reminds her of Obon (the festival of the dead) which comes next week (and also symbolizes the end of summer to many Japanese) I will leave it at this. I just hope the temperatures follow suit with the change in light. I hate sweating all day and night.
In the meantime there is wine...
2008 Rietsch, Sylvaner, Vieille Vignes, Mittelbergheim, Alsace - (12.3%). There is no sulfite note on the label, so it's possible it's true, and this producer has done it before....especially with the "sans doute" riesling and the vin jaune style blanc de noir I posted on earlier from this maker. Organic/bio-d producer and a few generations in it seems, and with a few exceptions, all lower alc wines, prompting me to wonder if Mittelbergheim occupies a cool shadow over there?
My first sylvaner (woo hoo?) and, given the scarcity of notes here, I see this is not a grape considered to be worth much (despite it's recent entry into the Grand Cru pantheon of Zotzenburg). Maybe it's the Liebfraumilch. Fwiw, as an aside, (not that you can find this stuff in the US) Rietsch does make a 100% sylvaner from the Z site, and from the specs, looks much riper. This one, however, is different. (acidity:6.2 g/l, rs: 6.9 g/l). Just tilting into off-dry, in a way that I love. What I got from this wine was mainly memories of Austrian rieslings and gv's,. Grass notes, hay, touches of fresh grapefruit rind, spring water (no lentils tho)...good things on the nose. Much lighter on the palate than something like ZH. But a floating, subtly saline silkiness I appreciated. Open to please without spreading too widely (slightly chilled, in a riesling glass was where it showed it's best). Very clear flavors, decent delineated lines, a bit of must, and, with aeration, a lovely citric and lengthy multicolored limey finish. Bravo for $22. A quaffer with depth.
2009 Cornelissen, Contadino 7, Etna, Sicily - (13.5%). I guess this is a field blend of red and white grapes....and hey, it's less cloudy! Too bad, that, perhaps. The Contadino 6 I should have bought a case of. Instead, here we have a case of Etna tasting like Loire (with possibly a touch of Sicilian ash/tannin on the finish). It's missing the Etna ripeness, as well as raising those vin naturels all taste similar question. I was especially reminded of the Cot here. Mouthfeel is very delish. Acidity? No problemo. Ripeness, my main complaint with Puzelat reds (not the whites) is lacking here.....and I'm talking Etna ripeness. Different thing, I think. Smokier and yet giving, but there. This ain't there. This is more pinched and a tad bitchy. (Then again, what do I know? Etna might have had a Loire weather year...)
2004 Donati Sauvignon dell'Emilia Frizzante, IGT, Emilia Romania (13.5%) - More robust with a huskier voice compared to last year's bottle, which seemed so lithe, high toned and nearly champagne-like. In a downward curve? This time it's bubbly orange all the way, and I've no real problem with that (except that for the heat, and lack of ac at home here, the Coste Pianne prosecco might have been a better choice tonight). This is darker in all of it's tones: there's a bit of caramel tucked in between the pine and apricot notes, there's plenty of tannin, grapefruit, tobacco and quinine too. Excellent perlage, btw...subtle, persistent, lasting. Quaffable, but I sense a subtle dumb state here. Closer in the lambic sense to the malvasia version right now, whereas last year, it was rather a different higher toned thing. Still totally lovable. I'm so glad Donati exists. One wonders what strangeness lurks behind a 20 yr old version of this stuff.
In the meantime there is wine...
2008 Rietsch, Sylvaner, Vieille Vignes, Mittelbergheim, Alsace - (12.3%). There is no sulfite note on the label, so it's possible it's true, and this producer has done it before....especially with the "sans doute" riesling and the vin jaune style blanc de noir I posted on earlier from this maker. Organic/bio-d producer and a few generations in it seems, and with a few exceptions, all lower alc wines, prompting me to wonder if Mittelbergheim occupies a cool shadow over there?
My first sylvaner (woo hoo?) and, given the scarcity of notes here, I see this is not a grape considered to be worth much (despite it's recent entry into the Grand Cru pantheon of Zotzenburg). Maybe it's the Liebfraumilch. Fwiw, as an aside, (not that you can find this stuff in the US) Rietsch does make a 100% sylvaner from the Z site, and from the specs, looks much riper. This one, however, is different. (acidity:6.2 g/l, rs: 6.9 g/l). Just tilting into off-dry, in a way that I love. What I got from this wine was mainly memories of Austrian rieslings and gv's,. Grass notes, hay, touches of fresh grapefruit rind, spring water (no lentils tho)...good things on the nose. Much lighter on the palate than something like ZH. But a floating, subtly saline silkiness I appreciated. Open to please without spreading too widely (slightly chilled, in a riesling glass was where it showed it's best). Very clear flavors, decent delineated lines, a bit of must, and, with aeration, a lovely citric and lengthy multicolored limey finish. Bravo for $22. A quaffer with depth.
2009 Cornelissen, Contadino 7, Etna, Sicily - (13.5%). I guess this is a field blend of red and white grapes....and hey, it's less cloudy! Too bad, that, perhaps. The Contadino 6 I should have bought a case of. Instead, here we have a case of Etna tasting like Loire (with possibly a touch of Sicilian ash/tannin on the finish). It's missing the Etna ripeness, as well as raising those vin naturels all taste similar question. I was especially reminded of the Cot here. Mouthfeel is very delish. Acidity? No problemo. Ripeness, my main complaint with Puzelat reds (not the whites) is lacking here.....and I'm talking Etna ripeness. Different thing, I think. Smokier and yet giving, but there. This ain't there. This is more pinched and a tad bitchy. (Then again, what do I know? Etna might have had a Loire weather year...)
2004 Donati Sauvignon dell'Emilia Frizzante, IGT, Emilia Romania (13.5%) - More robust with a huskier voice compared to last year's bottle, which seemed so lithe, high toned and nearly champagne-like. In a downward curve? This time it's bubbly orange all the way, and I've no real problem with that (except that for the heat, and lack of ac at home here, the Coste Pianne prosecco might have been a better choice tonight). This is darker in all of it's tones: there's a bit of caramel tucked in between the pine and apricot notes, there's plenty of tannin, grapefruit, tobacco and quinine too. Excellent perlage, btw...subtle, persistent, lasting. Quaffable, but I sense a subtle dumb state here. Closer in the lambic sense to the malvasia version right now, whereas last year, it was rather a different higher toned thing. Still totally lovable. I'm so glad Donati exists. One wonders what strangeness lurks behind a 20 yr old version of this stuff.