Jay Miller
Jay Miller
It was singing after about 2 hours.
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
Too much shorthand!
And not even Google is my friend about it.
originally posted by VLM:
2005 is very savory right now, decant or no.
If I only had a few bottles, I wouldn't open yet. Somewhat counter-intuitively, the Croix Boissée is showing pretty well right now.
2005 is such an anomalous year, it is tough to know what to make of them. I'll stick by my thinking that the 2004s are better balanced and the more interesting wines in the long term.
originally posted by Yixin:
originally posted by VLM:
2005 is very savory right now, decant or no.
If I only had a few bottles, I wouldn't open yet. Somewhat counter-intuitively, the Croix Boissée is showing pretty well right now.
2005 is such an anomalous year, it is tough to know what to make of them. I'll stick by my thinking that the 2004s are better balanced and the more interesting wines in the long term.
Depends on the soil, monkey boy.
To savour, yes? How is 2005 anomalous? I would have thought perhaps archetypical. My thinking, whether I stick by it or no, is that your question about 2004 and 2005 will not be answered in the long term.originally posted by VLM:
2005 is very savory right now, decant or no.
If I only had a few bottles, I wouldn't open yet. Somewhat counter-intuitively, the Croix Boissée is showing pretty well right now.
2005 is such an anomalous year, it is tough to know what to make of them. I'll stick by my thinking that the 2004s are better balanced and the more interesting wines in the long term.
originally posted by Jeff Connell:
To savour, yes? How is 2005 anomalous? I would have thought perhaps archetypical. My thinking, whether I stick by it or no, is that your question about 2004 and 2005 will not be answered in the long term.originally posted by VLM:
2005 is very savory right now, decant or no.
If I only had a few bottles, I wouldn't open yet. Somewhat counter-intuitively, the Croix Boissée is showing pretty well right now.
2005 is such an anomalous year, it is tough to know what to make of them. I'll stick by my thinking that the 2004s are better balanced and the more interesting wines in the long term.
I haven't dipped into 2005s so much--what about them was so outside the range that included a crazy year like 2003 or warm 1997 or 1989, or what have you?originally posted by VLM:
2005 was anomalous in that it was far outside anyone's range of experience and no one really had concrete ideas about how the wines would evolve.
originally posted by VLM:
2005 is very savory right now, decant or no.
If I only had a few bottles, I wouldn't open yet. Somewhat counter-intuitively, the Croix Boissée is showing pretty well right now.
2005 is such an anomalous year, it is tough to know what to make of them. I'll stick by my thinking that the 2004s are better balanced and the more interesting wines in the long term.
But for those of us who haven't been guzzling as diligently, what marks '05 as so distinct? My more limited sample would certainly tell me that it's different from '04, no argument there, but what are the unique properties of '05 in your mind?originally posted by VLM:
Well, to since you are being all fatboy, I've had every wine from every major producer of Chinon, Bougueil and Rougeard from 2004 and 2005 at least twice for each vintage, some many more times than that. That is on the back of drinking these wines for a considerable amount of time and having hundreds of bottles in the cellar that I drink with regularity.
So, according to my calculations, I have sufficient statistical power to detect a difference.
originally posted by VLM:
Well, to since you are being all fatboy, I've had every wine from every major producer of Chinon, Bougueil and Rougeard from 2004 and 2005 at least twice for each vintage, some many more times than that. That is on the back of drinking these wines for a considerable amount of time and having hundreds of bottles in the cellar that I drink with regularity.
So, according to my calculations, I have sufficient statistical power to detect a difference.
originally posted by Yixin:
originally posted by VLM:
Well, to since you are being all fatboy, I've had every wine from every major producer of Chinon, Bougueil and Rougeard from 2004 and 2005 at least twice for each vintage, some many more times than that. That is on the back of drinking these wines for a considerable amount of time and having hundreds of bottles in the cellar that I drink with regularity.
So, according to my calculations, I have sufficient statistical power to detect a difference.
Dude, it's called Saumur-Champigny. In fact, there's more than one Foucault...
But I have the same question as Joe - what makes 2005 so different? Less acute palates like mine could do with some education.