Thanks, Eric

Florida Jim

Florida Jim
1999 Juge, Cornas Cuvée SC:
13% alcohol; a lovely wine with a fundamental problem; it smells like something musty or rotting got mixed into terrific Cornas; I don’t believe this is corked (and neither does Diane; she being more sensitive to it than I) but whatever it is, the flaw ruins the experience. There is so much great fruit with a distinct sauvage character to it, that I don’t think TCA is the problem. Regardless, a shame; not undrinkable, but close.
(BTW, 24 hours in the decanter didn’t make much difference.)

1999 Texier, Côte Rôtie VV:
13% alcohol, substantial sediment; the wine that inspired me to make syrah; very expressive nose with syrah fruit, black olive, smoked bacon, ash and all sorts of nuance, but above all else, fruit; much the same on the palate with loads of fruit set-off nicely with nuance, structure and complexity, intense, concentrated, balanced, both sweet and savory, and, achingly long. My benchmark for Côte Rôtie and so wonderfully of its place as to make me want to speak French. With risotto and Rancho Gordo® scarlet runner beans, the stuff of dreams.
A life list wine. Oh my!

1996 Roumier, Morey St-Denis Clos de la Bussiere 1er Cru:
13.5% alcohol; a fine nose that is Morey to a tee; similar in the mouth, resolved, elegant, soft (but not flabby) and complex, good fruit, good balance; medium length, pretty finish. A very nice wine . . . but no vitality. Excellent Burgundy, a good Morey, but a blasé 1er.

2009 Triennes, Rosé:
13% alcohol, about $10, from a property owned by Aubert de Villaine and Jacques Seysses, primarily made of Cinsault; pale salmon color; smells of flowers, salt and stone-pit fruit; flavors follow the nose and it has a stony/mineral undertone that never lets it cloy. Fresh, clean, bone dry and good for both porch refreshment and light meals.

2007 Dom. J. Chamonard, Morgon:
12.5% alcohol; of its place on the nose and palate with focused fruit and a dark, earthen flavor that either lends it distinction or detracts from the fruit, depending on your point of view. Needs time in the decanter but was expressive accompaniment to pressed Cuban sandwiches and Caesar salad.

Best, Jim
 
99 CR shows bacon ?
Did not expect it.
Great wine, regardless.
 
I'm sure one person's bacon is another's ham is another's meat or blood.
However one describes it, there is enough complexity to frame the exuberant fruit and the balance is such as to deliver finesse.
Great wine, indeed!
Best, Jim
 
originally posted by Florida Jim:
1999 Texier, Côte Rôtie VV:
13% alcohol, substantial sediment; the wine that inspired me to make syrah; very expressive nose with syrah fruit, black olive, smoked bacon, ash and all sorts of nuance, but above all else, fruit; much the same on the palate with loads of fruit set-off nicely with nuance, structure and complexity, intense, concentrated, balanced, both sweet and savory, and, achingly long. My benchmark for Côte Rôtie and so wonderfully of its place as to make me want to speak French. With risotto and Rancho Gordo® scarlet runner beans, the stuff of dreams.
A life list wine. Oh my!

I am in love with the 2006. While a different animal, I have equally high hopes for it.

I'd love to have the 1999 sometime as I have none in the cellar.

1996 Roumier, Morey St-Denis Clos de la Bussiere 1er Cru:
13.5% alcohol; a fine nose that is Morey to a tee; similar in the mouth, resolved, elegant, soft (but not flabby) and complex, good fruit, good balance; medium length, pretty finish. A very nice wine . . . but no vitality. Excellent Burgundy, a good Morey, but a blasé 1er.

I had a bottle recently (early Jan) that was as you describe on the nose, but the palate was tighter and younger. It was a very good experience in a "not quite at drinking window" Burgundy sort of way.

2007 Dom. J. Chamonard, Morgon:
12.5% alcohol; of its place on the nose and palate with focused fruit and a dark, earthen flavor that either lends it distinction or detracts from the fruit, depending on your point of view. Needs time in the decanter but was expressive accompaniment to pressed Cuban sandwiches and Caesar salad.

Best, Jim

I've yet to be won over by these wines. Since everyone else seems to love them, I suppose I'll keep trying.
 
I feel Oswaldo and I fall on deaf ears...

Stars must to align!

Or else we'll sit in our Brazilian and Parisian backwaters and watch, gimlet-eyed.
 
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
I feel Oswaldo and I fall on deaf ears...

Stars must to align!

Or else we'll sit in our Brazilian and Parisian backwaters and watch, gimlet-eyed.
I have a few bottles.
 
originally posted by SFJoe:
Well, Eric is in town in a week.

Also, all your Marmot shell are belong to us.

I'll be in Spain 10-20th with Andre. Eric get's into Durham on the 20th, so I'll see him then, but without 1999, I fear.
 
originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by Florida Jim:
1999 Texier, Côte Rôtie VV:
13% alcohol, substantial sediment; the wine that inspired me to make syrah; very expressive nose with syrah fruit, black olive, smoked bacon, ash and all sorts of nuance, but above all else, fruit; much the same on the palate with loads of fruit set-off nicely with nuance, structure and complexity, intense, concentrated, balanced, both sweet and savory, and, achingly long. My benchmark for Côte Rôtie and so wonderfully of its place as to make me want to speak French. With risotto and Rancho Gordo® scarlet runner beans, the stuff of dreams.
A life list wine. Oh my!

I am in love with the 2006. While a different animal, I have equally high hopes for it.

Is the '06 Cote Rotie still open for business?
We tried an '05 Gervais Cadienieres that was shut down pretty hard this weekend.
 
originally posted by Marc D:
originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by Florida Jim:
1999 Texier, Côte Rôtie VV:
13% alcohol, substantial sediment; the wine that inspired me to make syrah; very expressive nose with syrah fruit, black olive, smoked bacon, ash and all sorts of nuance, but above all else, fruit; much the same on the palate with loads of fruit set-off nicely with nuance, structure and complexity, intense, concentrated, balanced, both sweet and savory, and, achingly long. My benchmark for Côte Rôtie and so wonderfully of its place as to make me want to speak French. With risotto and Rancho Gordo® scarlet runner beans, the stuff of dreams.
A life list wine. Oh my!

I am in love with the 2006. While a different animal, I have equally high hopes for it.

Is the '06 Cote Rotie still open for business?
We tried an '05 Gervais Cadienieres that was shut down pretty hard this weekend.

I wouldn't say "open for business" but not "shut down" either. I think that Eric's current methodology doesn't lead to wines that shut down hard. I think that in particularly structured vintages, like 2005, that can be the case.

If I lived in NY (or Toronto), I'd say it is 30 years too young.

But I don't, and I really don't think syrah gets that much more interesting with tons of age.

But I'm just a simple country boy.
 
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