one for the life list and some others

Cliff

Cliff Rosenberg
1995 Trimbach Riesling Clos Ste. Hune - France, Alsace, Hunawihr, Alsace AOC (3/18/2011)
Magnificent. Fairly full, the texture of a beautiful white Burgundy without any hint of oak, walking the line between the richness of butter and cream, on the one hand, and the clarity of olive oil on the other. I was surprised by its rounded quality: not sweet by any means, everything was perfectly ripe, including the acidity; there was no hint of austerity. Rainwater over perfectly smooth stones. Pit fruits and beautiful floral overtones framed by endless mineral depth. Everything in place. There was nothing forced, no preening. I do not think this could have shown better. The stars were aligned.

2002 Triacca Valtellina Superiore - Sassella - Italy, Lombardia, Valtellina, Valtellina Superiore - Sassella (3/18/2011)
This suffered for being served after the stunning Clos St. Hune, but it was singing on its own terms. When opened, about 4:45pm, it showed structure and a little fruit from a small tasting pour. I was afraid to double decant so early, so I stuck a cork in it and carried it -- first to a tasting, then to dinner. We started in on it by about 8:30, I'd guess. It had put on some weight, showed mostly red perfume but a little hollow on the palate. But it continued to flesh out over the course of the evening. By 11:30, having taken the last little bit back on another subway ride..., it had really fleshed out and showed some substance to match the perfume. Not profound. Not tons of complexity. But lovely lift and a lovely tension between weightlessness and intense aromatics. Too bad this was the last one. The winery says drink up in 7yrs. Bunk.

2004 Éric Texier Côtes du Rhône-Brézème Domaine de Pergaud - France, Rhône, Northern Rhône, Côtes du Rhône-Brézème (3/20/2011)
My bottles are in a good spot. This still shows some tannin, but there is no harm in drinking now. It depends what you're looking for. This is open and expansive, with earth, olives, rocks, and, as I say, some tannin left to resolve.

2002 Coudert Fleurie Clos de la Roilette Cuvée Tardive - France, Burgundy, Beaujolais, Fleurie (3/20/2011)
Good showing, but not great. On opening, it was a little stinky and sour, so I slow ox'ed for a few hours and decanted right before serving. That perked things up quite a bit. Showing a little orange, it has spread out on the nose and palate with telltale leather, earth, and violets. Better is yet to come, I suspect.

2002 Dönnhoff Niederhäuser Hermannshöhle Riesling Spätlese - Germany, Nahe (3/19/2011)
Petrol city, sugar, and not much else. Disappointing given what it was on release and what it's supposed to be.

2006 Edmond Vatan Sancerre Clos la Néore - France, Loire Valley, Upper Loire, Sancerre (3/19/2011)
Opens fresh and young, with a typical Sauvignon Blanc profile, but not much Vatan. Opened up quite a bit after an hour in the decanter. I don't think this is the best time to be checking in, but, still, wow, lovely stuff with gorgeous minerality.

2005 Michel Tête Juliénas Domaine du Clos du Fief - France, Burgundy, Beaujolais, Juliénas (3/19/2011)
Not ready. On opening, the nose was completely primary, with a striking, fresh varietal character. The tannins are still present, and very bitter. We nursed it for an hour or two in a decanter. The fruit came out and was nice but never overcame the austerity.
 
I don't think the Hune could have been any better, but am open to being proven wrong. Couldn't spot any flaw on the Donnhoff -- it was pretty disappointing. I'm generally not terribly averse to the petrol stage. This just didn't have much else besides sweetness going on. I have some more, so I will see.
 
I guess the dates were the dates consumed? If consumed the same evening, the CSH could certainly make a lot of German Riesling seem a bit flabby and simple. But it seems like you might have had them on different nights so there goes that theory.

Vatan may have a similar effect?
 
No, the dates are mostly inconsistent. Most often, they record when I wrote the note, not when I tasted the wine. I had the Hune and the Triacca together. The Donnhoff followed the Vatan. Texier followed Coudert, and the Tete went on its own.
 
I opened a bottle of the hermannshohle almost exactly a year ago and my notes indicate that we all found it pretty sweet and soft - and it really compared unfavorably to the 02 kupfergrube that I'd opened a month earlier.
 
Thanks for the Tete note - I have some 05 Prestige that I guess I should hang onto a while yet, especially since they are magnums.

Maybe I will end up bequeathing my 09 Cuvee Tardive.
 
I haven't touched the Tete prestige and won't until these start to come together. Do I gather 09 Coudert Tardive is starting to clamp down?
 
Haven't opened a second 09 CT since my initial purchase months ago, but if the 02 is barely coming around now, I bought 09s in sufficient quantity (and sufficiently large bottles) that I may end up passing on a portion of my stash (which wouldn't be such a bad thing, of course).

By the way, I blame you for my quandary, Cliff. It was your notes and adamant praise of the 05 CT that got me focused on this stuff in the first place.
 
A bottle of 2009 Coudert Tardive 2 weeks ago may have been the most closed bottle of wine I have witnessed in a couple of years (I'd have to go back to 2007 Descombes Brouilly as a cognate, so maybe that was three years ago). Epic closure. Like all you could get were alcohol aromas. And this was with Peking Duck, mind you. You'd think it would have liked the surroundings.

After about an hour some fruit started to peak out from around a corner and you could just barely recognize this entity as a wine.
 
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