1992 Ridge ATP: Slightly corked but still good

SteveTimko

Steve Timko
1992 Ridge Carignane Whitten Ranch - USA, California, Sonoma County, Dry Creek Valley (6/29/2011)

This turned out to be pretty interesting. I got a slight mustiness on the nose. Glenn concluded it was slightly corked. The fact that I perceived the mustiness is evidence to the contrary because I have almost no TCA perception. Whatever the flaw, we continued to drink this wine and enjoy it. It's still holding on and has several years to go.
For me, the wine was a nice contrast. There were some bright red fruit flavors and there was also some distinctive southern Rhone=style garrigue. Also maybe some mushroominess. Good finish.Kind of a lighter style and definitely food friendly. Aging helped this wine. I look forward to drinking my other bottle.
175962.jpg


1988 Karthäuserhof Eitelsbacher Karthäuserhofberg Riesling Spätlese - Germany, Mosel Saar Ruwer (6/29/2011)

Initially it seemed tired but it got better with air. The wine retains a nice core of acidity but there's not much to balance that against. Besides the acidity the dominant flavor was a burnt marzipan.Not much on the nose. Balanced and a decent finish. Definitely seems to be on a downhill slope and probably would have been better a couple of years ago when I bought it. A Rudi Wiest import.
155073.jpg


2006 Dehlinger Pinot Noir Goldridge - USA, California, Sonoma County, Russian River Valley (6/29/2011)

Still young but this wine shows a lot of promise. Glenn I suspect made sure it got plenty of air so the wine showed well. The two things that stood out for me on this wine were the Russian Russian spiciness and the finish. The spiciness on the nose added nice complexity to the tart red fruit flavor. Also, it had a tremendous finish. My Spidey senses tell me this is a finish that will only improve as the wine ages. This was a good wine now, especially with the sockeye salmon, but I suspect this will really come together well in three to five years.
177578.jpg


2006 Franco Noussan Valle d'Aosta Pinot Noir - Italy, Valle d'Aosta (6/4/2011)

Tasted like pinot noir to me, albeit a spicy one. It didn't have much subtlety. Fairly straightforward and one dimensional. A Burgundyphile complained it did not taste like pinot noir. He said he liked it but thought it tasted like a generic red blend. The spices were what stood out for me. Balanced and inoffensive but unremarkable. A Lous/Dressner import.
173427.jpg


2007 La Crotta di Vegneron Gamay - Italy, Valle d'Aosta, Chambave (5/29/2011)

This evolved nicely over an hour. Initially it tasted neither gamay nor Italian. Not even European. I would have guessed a California grenache blend if I had tasted it blind, I think. After an hour the acidity came to the forefront. So much so it really needed food. As far as the fruit, it didn't taste like gamay from Beaujolais but it did have some rusticity to it. Dark fruits. Shortish finish. A spicy, mildly fragrant nose. Needs food but otherwise balanced.Remains fairly generic. This is from a cooperative in Valle d'Aosta. Imported by Villa Italia wines.
99020.jpg
 
originally posted by SteveTimko:
2007 La Crotta di Vegneron Gamay - Italy, Valle d'Aosta, Chambave (5/29/2011)

This evolved nicely over an hour. Initially it tasted neither gamay nor Italian. Not even European. I would have guessed a California grenache blend if I had tasted it blind, I think...

Interesting. We were recently in Umbria near Lago Trasimeno, where they produce a varietal wine they label as Gamay. I talked to a farmer who provides grapes to the local co-op, and he told me that it is actually made with Grenache rather than Gamay. Unforunately, I don't recall all of the story about how the vines came to the area, nor did I taste the wine. Vallée d'Aoste is a good ways away from there, but I wonder if there is some connection, or at least a similar story, involved.
 
2006 Dehlinger Pinot Noir Goldridge - USA, California, Sonoma County, Russian River Valley (6/29/2011)

Still young but this wine shows a lot of promise. Glenn I suspect made sure it got plenty of air so the wine showed well. The two things that stood out for me on this wine were the Russian Russian spiciness and the finish. The spiciness on the nose added nice complexity to the tart red fruit flavor. Also, it had a tremendous finish. My Spidey senses tell me this is a finish that will only improve as the wine ages. This was a good wine now, especially with the sockeye salmon, but I suspect this will really come together well in three to five years.

Given your description here, I would say that the key with this wine right now is "aeration, aeration, aeration." Drank this not too long ago with the estimable Josefa Concannon and her husband Mark, and it was good, but also very primary and a bit candied, in that Russian River cherry lozenge kinda way. Half an hour later the bottle was almost empty (it was a good party) and the wine was just starting to pull itself together. You definitely approached this the smart way.
 
originally posted by Steve Guattery:
originally posted by SteveTimko:
2007 La Crotta di Vegneron Gamay - Italy, Valle d'Aosta, Chambave (5/29/2011)

This evolved nicely over an hour. Initially it tasted neither gamay nor Italian. Not even European. I would have guessed a California grenache blend if I had tasted it blind, I think...

Interesting. We were recently in Umbria near Lago Trasimeno, where they produce a varietal wine they label as Gamay. I talked to a farmer who provides grapes to the local co-op, and he told me that it is actually made with Grenache rather than Gamay. Unforunately, I don't recall all of the story about how the vines came to the area, nor did I taste the wine. Vallée d'Aoste is a good ways away from there, but I wonder if there is some connection, or at least a similar story, involved.

I would be curious why they would label it gamay. I'm guessing Umbria is quite bit warmer than Valle d'Aosta. Maybe grenache represents something with the fragrance but not the elegance of pinot noir.
 
originally posted by Aaron:
2006 Dehlinger Pinot Noir Goldridge - USA, California, Sonoma County, Russian River Valley (6/29/2011)

Still young but this wine shows a lot of promise. Glenn I suspect made sure it got plenty of air so the wine showed well. The two things that stood out for me on this wine were the Russian Russian spiciness and the finish. The spiciness on the nose added nice complexity to the tart red fruit flavor. Also, it had a tremendous finish. My Spidey senses tell me this is a finish that will only improve as the wine ages. This was a good wine now, especially with the sockeye salmon, but I suspect this will really come together well in three to five years.

Given your description here, I would say that the key with this wine right now is "aeration, aeration, aeration." Drank this not too long ago with the estimable Josefa Concannon and her husband Mark, and it was good, but also very primary and a bit candied, in that Russian River cherry lozenge kinda way. Half an hour later the bottle was almost empty (it was a good party) and the wine was just starting to pull itself together. You definitely approached this the smart way.
Glenn, who posted sometimes on Wine Therapy and lurks here, is not shy about pulling a cork and letting it air overnight. I did not ask how much air the Dehlinger got, but obviously it helped.
 
originally posted by SteveTimko:

Glenn, who posted sometimes on Wine Therapy and lurks here, is not shy about pulling a cork and letting it air overnight. I did not ask how much air the Dehlinger got, but obviously it helped.

Speaking of which, Steve, what has become of your friend (I think) Devlon? He used to post to Therapy, too.

Mark Lipton
 
Devlon is doing well. His craft beer distribution has picked up and he's handling more business in Las Vegas. Devlon says he's quite busy.
 
Back
Top