kirk wallace
kirk wallace
I had not tasted the '05 "Trois" since early July. I opened a bottle last night to go with a stew of a trio of rancho gordo beans (eye of the goat, rio zape and their "midnight" black beans) and Quattro Farm smoked duck and smoked chicken, (along with a few arbol chiles, some New Mexican Red Chile powder, and a touch of chesnut honey at the very end).
This wine has smoothed and filled itself out. It still has that brothy, almost buttery richness, but the persistant umami character that SFJoe identified early on, has receded a bit. Now it provides a great background infrastructure for the rest of the wine. So, right now, or last night at least, and maybe it was just a very felicitous match with the smokey flavors of the fowls, but it was showing a surperb harmony of minerality and fruit with a coiled, patient power from the tip of the tongue to the back of the throat. I've stashed 6 in the warehouse to see how they age, but I forsee near-term, enjoyable drinking for the rest of the case.
This wine has smoothed and filled itself out. It still has that brothy, almost buttery richness, but the persistant umami character that SFJoe identified early on, has receded a bit. Now it provides a great background infrastructure for the rest of the wine. So, right now, or last night at least, and maybe it was just a very felicitous match with the smokey flavors of the fowls, but it was showing a surperb harmony of minerality and fruit with a coiled, patient power from the tip of the tongue to the back of the throat. I've stashed 6 in the warehouse to see how they age, but I forsee near-term, enjoyable drinking for the rest of the case.