Iconned

Thor

Thor Iverson
Edmunds St. John 1993 Syrah Durell (Sonoma Valley) Glacially-cellared, and this was in mind as we opened the wine, because in retrospect Im not sure Ive ever had a Durell syrah that I thought was fully mature. This one gave its best effort, though, and is the closest Ive come. Very masculine, all rippling muscles and five oclock shadow, wrapping dark blackberry residue in leather and tarnished metal buckles. Lingers, a very long while. Very, very good. (8/10)

Tablas Creek 2005 Syrah (Paso Robles) Burly but not overbearing, loading up the wagon with blackberries and blueberries, leather, roasted nuts, and rich California ripeness. Theres earth and baritone to this wine, and its balanced and structured enough to reward a fair bit of cellaring, I think. (8/10)

Tablas Creek 2006 Ctes de Tablas Blanc (Paso Robles) The bronzed stone fruit has not diminished in intensity since release, but it has taken on a deeper, richer tone, the metallics have been somewhat energized, and theres more soil in evidence. This is a heavy wine in the grand scheme, though decidedly not so in its local idiom, and is still quite luscious and even a little blowsy. Im convinced that age will continue to turn this wine, but those who require upfront fruit may want to think about drinking sooner rather than later. (9/10)

Qup 2007 Syrah (Central Coast) Purple fun. Fruity and only a little bit frooty, with fruit and a side of fruit. Finishes fruity. And despite all this (did I mention fruit?), its actually syrah-like. In a way, this is what California should be best at. Only they shouldnt charge four or five times what Qup is charging for thisand yet, they do. (7/10)

Ravenswood 1999 Icon (Sonoma County) 13.9% alcohol, 73% syrah, 16% mourvdre, 11% grenache, and 100% heralding the ubiquitous plague of fat-bottomed bottles that fit or stack nowhere. Much more decent than Id expected, but then I didnt expect much. It tastes like generic semi-aged California wine, which is to say its still simplistically dark-fruited with most of the structure polished away, yet has gained no real complexity or interest over its youthful self. Yes, its still not very old, but given that the structure has already faded I see no indication that longer aging will do more than damage to the wine. Theres an element of greenness to it that Id like to think might be complexity in a differently-composed wine, but I dont expect green in California versions of any of the above-listed grapes, and so Im inclined to think that the grapes werent all they could have been. Which might account for an alcohol level that, through the lens of todays monstrosities, seems entirely reasonable. (10/10)

Reverie 2005 Barbera (Diamond Mountain) Thoroughly anonymous. Saccharine red fruit, sickly-sweet oak, and not even all that much acid. A little boozy, though. This is, Im afraid, what far too many Piedmontese are trying to achieve with their own efforts. Lets hope they dont succeed. (10/10)

Havens 2004 Syrah MJ (Dry Creek Valley) Glancing at the label rather than actually reading the text, this looks like an Unti wine, which threw me a bit until I got my hands on the bottle. 14.5% alcohol. Its syrah, all right, and New World syrah at that. And its tasty enough, getting pretty quickly to the leathery dark berry portion of the evenings entertainment. Complexity? No, not really. But as a quaffer, its nice. (11/10)

Londer 2007 Pinot Noir (Anderson Valley) Starts with the weird cola/candy thing that used to mar so many California pinots, but that has never been particularly common from the Anderson Valley. So thats weird. It does eventually round into a sort of form, layering some metallic soils and a still-sweetish red fruit together, but while this is happing the wine flattens and loses some of its life. Not bad, but theres still work to be done. (10/10)
 
All that slagging of the Ravenswood, and you still go and score it 10/10. I knew you'd suffer 'score inflation' once you began handing out the points.
Exactly the same thing happened with the WA, WS, WC and all those W... subscriptions of mine, without whom wine is virtually unpurchaseable.
It's a serious problem in today's wine world.
G
 
I apparently liked the Havens so much I couldn't fit my score within the scale. Talk about inflation!
 
originally posted by Thor:
I apparently liked the Havens so much I couldn't fit my score within the scale. Talk about inflation!
Really just wait for those EOY tasting notes followed by the inevitable falloff.
 
What did Qupe charge?

As a rule, I like Anderson Valley pinots. But I tried the Londer (not sure of vintage) and some of the Golden Eye bottlings and realized there is an exception to every rule.

'Went to Steve's 25th Anniversary soiree yesterday and got a chance to taste through his current releases.
These days, I don't buy a lot of wine and, if I do, its usually a bottle or two.
'Bought three cases.
BTW, the 2009 Rocks and Gravel is remarkable - starts a bit disjointed and scratchy but, as soon as it gets used to being in the air, turns into god's own nectar. And Steve thinks his 2010 version is even better.

Best, Jim
 
Really just wait for those EOY tasting notes followed by the inevitable falloff.
Must be the barometric pressure.

What did Qupe charge?
$11.99 or $12.99 on closeout, IIRC. Regular price is high mid teens, isn't it?

As far as Mr. Edmunds, the only -- only -- good thing about his eventual retirement will be the immediate reallocation of significant funds to other regions. It's not a tradeoff I look forward to, though.
 
originally posted by Thor:

As far as Mr. Edmunds, the only -- only -- good thing about his eventual retirement will be the immediate reallocation of significant funds to other regions. It's not a tradeoff I look forward to, though.

He gives no indications that he will ever quit.
And yesterday he was looking forward to coming vintages.
Best, Jim
 
originally posted by Florida Jim:
originally posted by Thor:

As far as Mr. Edmunds, the only -- only -- good thing about his eventual retirement will be the immediate reallocation of significant funds to other regions. It's not a tradeoff I look forward to, though.

He gives no indications that he will ever quit.
And yesterday he was looking forward to coming vintages.
Best, Jim

Jim,
I gain a lot of insight and inspiration from many of your wonderful posts, but I'm not sure that any of them has brought me as much happiness as the one above. Thanks!

Mark Lipton
p.s. Now about that Cowan Cellars pre-offer...
 
originally posted by Thor:
I apparently liked the Havens so much I couldn't fit my score within the scale. Talk about inflation!

Perhaps Michael Havens is a Nigel Tufnel fan?

Mark Lipton
 
Perhaps Michael Havens is a Nigel Tufnel fan?
Perhaps, but he'll find he has work to do when he realizes my scale goes to 12 out of 10. At least, that is, for now. I'm thinking of making some changes next year to reflect modern winemaking trends.

(The sad truth is, I've heard from more than one winemaker and other tradespeople over the years questioning the disconnect between the words in my note and the "score." The sadder truth is, about half of them got angry when I explained, saying that I was misleading people and being unfair. I hate to think what they'd have done if I used prongs.)
 
originally posted by Thor:
Perhaps Michael Havens is a Nigel Tufnel fan?
Perhaps, but he'll find he has work to do when he realizes my scale goes to 12 out of 10. At least, that is, for now. I'm thinking of making some changes next year to reflect modern winemaking trends.

(The sad truth is, I've heard from more than one winemaker and other tradespeople over the years questioning the disconnect between the words in my note and the "score." The sadder truth is, about half of them got angry when I explained, saying that I was misleading people and being unfair. I hate to think what they'd have done if I used prongs.)

Or added a field for the day.
 
originally posted by Florida Jim:
originally posted by Thor:

As far as Mr. Edmunds, the only -- only -- good thing about his eventual retirement will be the immediate reallocation of significant funds to other regions. It's not a tradeoff I look forward to, though.

He gives no indications that he will ever quit.

Nor should he; the 2009 Rocks n Gravel and Wylie Syrah are stellar.
 
funny about finding a mature Durell; I've not yet experienced one, either, but then the wines aren't all that old yet, in human years at least. I brought some '87 (88% Durell, as I recall, the rest old-vine McDowell, with some Duriff in it, goddamn those idiots) to a dinner in NY last month, and it seemed truly there, at peak, on plateau, whatever you call it, and it was an awful lot of fun to smell, and taste, and drink, with a truffled pork loin. I suspect the '91 might be there. The '88 is probably not really there, even if it is. The '89 might be there. The rest? Let's just sleep on it for a spell.
 
Even my most decrepit friends out here lack those vintages, or at least if they don't they're (wisely) keeping them from me. But no one out here is as old as Kessler, which is likely the problem in a nutshell.

Or maybe durif is/was the key all along!
 
Back
Top