I had many wine epiphanies, but one of my favorites was on a day trip to Chateauneuf in 1994. I wandered around town aware of a few producers but largely ignorant. Then here was Pegau. I'd never heard of it. I go in and taste. A kind lady behind the counter seems to find a mid-20-something American interested in the wine a bit unusual. I speak in broken French asking about the grapes and vinification, saying I worked with a wine shop in California (I didn't, but one allowed me to sneak into some tastings in SF by dropping their name...thank you Don Pozo). The kind woman perks up and says, you should try the 1988 blanc. Robert Parker apparently scored it well. Probably 90 points back then, pre-inflationary points of course. She goes in the back and brings out the bottle. Opens it, pours some for me, and I can still taste it. Classic white Chateauneuf, already with a few years age. So I've never forgotten Pegau and over the years I haven't noticed much change, aside from the weather. And pricing. And difficulty finding it. I have a soft spot for the large-scaled wines of this area. They aren't to my taste quite like they once were, but I'm fine drinking relatively high alcohol wines from this region. "Good" anything is usually good. Pegau to me is good. I don't care how many people share that opinion.