originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
What did Eric say about older Donnhoff?
We independently came to the conclusion that they don't age well. He made fun of me for having them in my cellar, so I guess he got there first. Too ripe.
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
What did Eric say about older Donnhoff?
Bernkasteler?originally posted by .sasha:
You and Eric are welcome not to like older flavours in Donnhoff. Now, if you told me you did not like a Gruenhauser circa 1993, then I'd recommend a good doctor.
originally posted by .sasha:
No different from ageing Cru Beaujolais, there is no right and wrong, you either like the flavours or you don't. I typically do not, but the exceptions are well worth the search.
You and Eric are welcome not to like older flavours in Donnhoff. Now, if you told me you did not like a Gruenhauser circa 1993, then I'd recommend a good doctor.
originally bleated by monkeybrains:
People still think you should age Donnhoff? I thought that canard had flown.
Once again, I need to thank Eric Texier for helping me understand this. Well that and bottles that go nowhere interesting.
originally posted by Yule Kim:
I have some '05 Donnhoff Norheimer Kirscheck Spatlese. I had one last year and found it a little cloying and was hoping bottle age would remedy the problem. But with all the talk about Donnhoff not aging well, do people think I should just drink them now and clear cellar space? Or would a couple more years help?
originally posted by fatboy:
i seem to recall you enjoying the 93 hh kab quite a bit. and you didn't spit the spaet. iirc, they completely eclipsed the meo/jayer brulees we used to wash them down.
originally posted by fatboy:
93 abtsberg may be my favorite gruenhauser kab ever. it has always always been beautiful, and still is.
a 15 minute bottle, solo.
originally farted by fragile_dipshit:
originally bleated by monkeybrains:
People still think you should age Donnhoff? I thought that canard had flown.
Once again, I need to thank Eric Texier for helping me understand this. Well that and bottles that go nowhere interesting.
i've been trying to ignore this particularly stupid interweb meme each time you try to start it, but here goes -- how the fuck do you know, n00b? i can remember you getting excited about them in the first place, and as far as i can see, it wasn't long enough ago for this opinion to mean shit.
which wines, specifically? and when?
and stop blaming eric -- he may think it, but we all think a lot of things. it is you who is saying it here.
fb.
originally posted by VLM:
Or let me put it another way. Did not get through pilot study for me.
originally posted by fatboy:
the 98s aren't "aged," n00b
how about we take another example -- you profess a love of g barthod wines (which, thanks to a psychotic but talented former employer, i know reasonably well -- as far back as the 81s, when dad was in charge). putting years like 87 and 92 to one side, the 01s are the first barthod's i've had that haven't required a shit load of patience once the baby fat blew off. the 89s tasted like shit for years, so that one could only finally see the point of them in the past couple; the 88s still taste like shit. the 91s are nice (finally), but the 93s are still lumpy, and need lots more time to my taste. 95, 96, 99? ditto or worse.
yet if some tool popped up on teh interwebs decided to launch a meme about how barthod wines don't age for shit, what would you be saying to them?
as it is, you are just wanking into the wind. small sample and big opinions, like any other other wannabe be webspurt.
fb.
originally posted by fatboy:
originally posted by VLM:
Or let me put it another way. Did not get through pilot study for me.
so why are you shooting your mouth off?
fb.
originally drooled by windy monkey:
At what sample will I have the power to have a well formed opinion?
I've had Donnhoff wines of 3 pradikats anywhere from 2 to 20 years old maybe 80-100 times. I realize that doesn't put me in the autism spectrum, and am am probably extrapolating beyond where I should given the data, but I'm pretty sure they don't get interesting as they age.
originally (and miraculously) posted by n00b *******:
They weren't heading in a direction I liked.
originally posted by fatboy:
originally posted by VLM:
At what sample will I have the power to have a well formed opinion?
I've had Donnhoff wines of 3 pradikats anywhere from 2 to 20 years old maybe 80-100 times. I realize that doesn't put me in the autism spectrum, and am am probably extrapolating beyond where I should given the data, but I'm pretty sure they don't get interesting as they age.
see, here's the thing. your barthod answer was specific. it gave it credibility.
whereas all you give me in re donnhoff is bluster. of which there is plenty on teh wine interwebs without you adding to it.
your "I've had Donnhoff wines of 3 pradikats anywhere from 2 to 20 years old maybe 80-100 times" could easily mean that you once tasted a 90 spatlese when you were drunk, you had a bunch of 2000s or whatever on release at some dipshit megatasting, and you have buyers remorse on a cooked case of grey market 98s that you bought out of a warehouse in bumfucksville.
in fact, given your barthod answer, i'm gonna assume it does.
fb.