originally posted by David from Switzerland:
That's a misunderstanding, and I do not remember saying anything the like: there should be greater potential for greatness in general for modern-styled CdP than tradionally styled Piedmontese Nebbiolo. I'm confused. The potential for getting a category (a piece of work) right is per se 100% (or 100 points on a scale). A perfect cheese cake is no less or more perfect than a perfect snail... I'm sorry, maybe I fail to see what you're getting at.
Greetings from Switzerland, David.
Let's see :
originally posted by David from Switzerland:
Clos Saint Jean Ch“teauneuf-du-Pape Deus Ex Machina 2007
From 60- to over 100-year-old vines, a blend of 60% Grenache aged in tank, and 40% Mourvèdre aged in small oak barrels (in part new, in part one-year-old). Believe it or not, yours truly ordered this (one of the most fairly priced wines on the list, if an excuse were needed, and: “curiosity killed the cat”), even though I found the standard 2007 CdP perplexing. Was happy to find I liked it much better than the 2004 and 2005. Virtually opaque purple-ruby-black. Roast lamb (or beef). Roasted herbs (for once hard to tell if Provençal or other). Oriental-spiced, big and superripe jammy blood pudding fruit. The old-vininess shows to some extent. Not the ultimate in tannin depth, with touches of coffee, marzipan and malt. Soft and a bit blood-orangey acidity. Quite long on the finish. Faint viscosity. Meat-juicier with airing. Balanced in the modern sense of the term, by which I mean, a quantitative there is no telling if a wine like this can achieve anything like “harmony” with bottle age (Nick and I strongly doubt it, and would recommend drinking this while it gives so much up-front, mindless pleasure). Happen to find consultant Pilippe Cambie’s style weirdly reminiscent of a Stéphane Derenoncourt to Michel Rolland styled Bordeaux, in this particular case a bit like the CdP version of Canon La Gaffelière. Be that as it may, the wine has its undeniable qualities. Glad to have had a chance to taste it in this context (everyone liked it for what it is, no less, no more), leisurely and from fine stemware. Rating: ~94(-?)
and
Giuseppe Rinaldi Barolo Brunate-Le Coste 2006
Thanks to Oliver. About 75% from Brunate and 25% from Le Coste. Medium ruby. Rather closed on the nose. Dried rose petal, ethereal, pretty plum, herbs such as dried oregano, soft brown spice, faint tar. Faintly dry tannin only, nicely favourful, on the whole, the 2006 is still quite traditionally-styled. Lovely depth. More Burgundian than the 1996. Balanced, long. Beautiful wine, and promising, this should evolve well in bottle, and quite a long time. Wines like this are becoming rare. Fair QPR. Rating: 93+/94
Am I wrong understanding that if Pascal Morel can achieve more "tannin depth"
the wine would deserve an certain upgrade in terms of point?
I don't have the same feeling through your TN about the Rinaldi.
I might be wrong, but the general feeling I get from reading your TNs is that Beppe Rinaldi Brunate-Le Coste is some kind of achievement of the traditional style from Barolo, and that Deus Ex Machina is a raw piece of grenache that could achieve something better if getting more "Harmony" (though you're not sure it could).
Now if Chateauneuf is cheese cake, and Barolo is snail, I understand that comparing your pts is useless and even stupid.
But is modern chateauneuf also part of cheese cake family or do I have to treat it separatly?
If so, then I may compare your points within the Chateauneuf boys working with Cambie, but not with the traditional styled producers of the same place.
Tough work...