Jeff Grossman
Jeff Grossman
It is the last day of winter and a troupe of Disorderlies gathers at La Sirene for a final cassoulet-and-madiran fest.
They are there now.
I'm not.
So, I can't report on the people, the conversation, the food, the ambience, or the wine.
But, as an almost-attendee who possesses a bottle of madiran, and who has taken it on the road to Bethlehem, PA -- where work has sent me today -- I can report on this wine:
Dom. Le Serp 2008 Madiran - 80% tannat and 20% cab franc, an initial buttery note blows off after a minute or two, the wine is quite dark, the nose is not at all green but rather cab-ish with a dark, graphite, slightly bitter note underneath; in the mouth, not so berry as the cab nose might promise, rather more of the plummy-tarry flavor that comes from tannat, mouthwateringly juicy; this is definitely the city-slicker cousin to a Montus
Thus begins the first Virtual Jeebus.
They are there now.
I'm not.
So, I can't report on the people, the conversation, the food, the ambience, or the wine.
But, as an almost-attendee who possesses a bottle of madiran, and who has taken it on the road to Bethlehem, PA -- where work has sent me today -- I can report on this wine:
Dom. Le Serp 2008 Madiran - 80% tannat and 20% cab franc, an initial buttery note blows off after a minute or two, the wine is quite dark, the nose is not at all green but rather cab-ish with a dark, graphite, slightly bitter note underneath; in the mouth, not so berry as the cab nose might promise, rather more of the plummy-tarry flavor that comes from tannat, mouthwateringly juicy; this is definitely the city-slicker cousin to a Montus
Thus begins the first Virtual Jeebus.