AFFII

Florida Jim

Florida Jim
1999 Hirtzberger, Grüner Veltliner Honivogl:
13.5% alcohol; precise and compact on both the nose and palate with perfect balance and an underlying stony tone that seems to guide you through the experience. Opens with air but never loses that cohesiveness that marks it from the outset. Accompanied a Thai noodle dish with veggies and peanut sauce very well. Fine wine.

2009 Tissot, Arbois VV (rouge):
Beautiful, ripe poulsard with mineral underpinnings and a dusty, dry but juicy delivery. Much better than my first couple bottles, which seemed fat and sweet. Very “old world” but also very good and delicious with heritage tomato pizza.

2005 de Villaine, Bourgogne La Digoine:
12.5% alcohol; attractive cherry and earth nose with some complexity; pretty flavors that echo the nose with good intensity, little weight and a slim but not insubstantial profile. A wine that is easy to drink, accompanied baked potatoes with yogurt and other toppings nicely but does not give much indication of its place or its future. Nice, but feels somewhat like a ‘young vines’ cuvée.

2005 Pieropan, Soave Calvarino:
12.5% alcohol; purity and precision is what this wine is about; an absolutely perfectly balanced, clean, deep presentation of garganega that is without artifice and is so of its essence as to be the standard by which I will judge the grape. Amazingly good with French fries and aioli.

2000 Gulfi, Nero d’Avola, Nerobufaleffi:
14% alcohol; a ringer for aged left bank Bordeaux with just a bit more complexity and fruit; decanted off substantial sediment; remarkable nose that fills out with air, very complex and alluring; equally so in the mouth with a deft texture and an intensity that speaks to ten years in bottle; long, full flavored finish. Spectacular with medium rare steak and really wonderful all by itself. As good as I have had of this variety.

Best, Jim
 
Thanks, Jim. Was interested by your note on the Villaine, as I think I recall you liking this wine pretty well in the past. Am I wrong? If not, would you say it was a bad bottle, in and awkward stage, or are your tastes beginning to outrun what this particular wine has to offer?

I have a couple of bottles coming in the fall and look forward to comparing notes.
 
Ian,
I liked it but did not love it.
Why is as much a mystery to me as to you.
But I will continue to buy this wine assuming the prices don't get worse.
Best, jim
 
Sorry, just curious, did not mean to interrogate you. The 2009 Digoine is mostly around $40. I was able to pick up a few stray 05s at 05 pricing.
 
I like the Hirtzberger better than you do.

How did you come to keep the Gulfi for so long? I think of that as their early-guzzling cuvee.
 
originally posted by SFJoe:
How did you come to keep the Gulfi for so long? I think of that as their early-guzzling cuvee.

Lost in the dim mists of the cellar.
Also, being 2,500 miles away helps.
Best, Jim
 
Nerobufaleffi can go some distance. Rossojbleo is the one for early consumption.

I believe I once opened the '00 Nerobufaleffi at the Casa Joe, but it was amongst top company that evening.
 
originally posted by Levi Dalton:
Nerobufaleffi can go some distance. Rossojbleo is the one for early consumption.

I believe I once opened the '00 Nerobufaleffi at the Casa Joe, but it was amongst top company that evening.
Whoops, you are so right. My mistake. Thanks.

Yes, the buff is the stuff, and the '00 was great. I drank a fair bit of that, and a recent '05 was actually quite nice, perhaps it will grow up to be as nice.
 
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