Mark Svereika Jeebus in D.C.

Ian Fitzsimmons

Ian Fitzsimmons
At peril of his mortal soul, Mark Svereika boldly ventured this week into the fearsome, planned city of Washington, D.C., overcoming the dire grid street layout to raise some Cain with National Capital disorderlies, accompanied by his muy simpatico wife Ha (sp?) and lovely daughter Nina. Also present were (in no particular order) Maureen, Cole, Mary, Bob, Jonathan, Gail, Yule and your humble reporter. I’m probably the least qualified to write notes, but Yule hasn’t posted yet, and no one else was scribbling, so here’s the line-up.

Whites:

2002 Baumard Savennieres Clos du Papillon

Lanolin, super dry, but with a sense of richness from the plump texture. Precise acidity that becomes ever more so, and more intense, with air time. Strikingly good.

2000 Raveneau Chablis 1er Cru Montmains

Out of the bottle, faintest yellow, limpid and pure, piercing acidity, fairly broad, solid Chablis tangy profile. With time in the glass, increasingly streamlined, sleek, refined. Still developing at the end of dinner. My first Raveneau, thank you Yule.

1997 Clos Ste. Hune

15 years young. Freshening breeze; from the bottle, very light, mild, still closed. Very refined, increasingly intense and vibrant through the course of the evening, still unfolding as we wrapped up. Lovely and full of potential still. Thanks Cole.

Vin Gris:

2008 Anthill Pinot Gris

On the nose, bit of heather and peach, with time, hint of coffee (?). Pleasingly smooth texture, clean, possibly modest residual sugar foiling the wine’s acidity, but not sweet or flabby. With time, relaxes, so that the texture becomes more open-knit. A nice American rose.

Reds:

2010 Octavin Trouseau

Fruity-vegetal nose. Sharp, biting acidity; very dry and rather flat. Some dismay among the diners and questions of corked-ness.

2002 Belliviere le Rouge Gorge

Pinot d’Aunis (Chenin Noir?). Fruity, some bubble gum. Biting acidity and chalky texture. Interesting wine with food, but suffered from the direct comparison with its more generous brethren at the table. Gail thought this bottle may have been flawed.

2001 Paolo Bea Rosso de Montefalco

Deep, balanced, dark fruits. Pleasantly round in the mouth and undergirded by good acidity. Brilliant with lamb brouchette. With time a bit of mocha, substantial increase in volume, and a kind of firework effect in the mouth. Impressive, delicious.

2002 Hubert Lamy St. Aubin 1er Cru Dernier Chez Edouard

Cherry nose, balanced, plenty of structure, tannins, acidity keeping the ample fruit in check. Taut. Not bad. Decent throw-weight.

1997 Sandro Fay Sassella Il Glicine

I failed to get the whole name for this bottle. Refreshing acidity, some plummy fruit. Most interesting with food: clean, nuanced, refreshing.

1990 Janasse Chateauneuf du Pape Cuvée Chaupin

High-toned nose, spicy, prominent acidity, ample tannins, some rustic mouth friction, spicy. Did I already say spicy? A bit short on the finish. Good wine, but, personally, I haven’t found, somehow, that Burgundy and Chateuneuf du Pape go well together in sequence.

2001 Arlaud Gevrey-Chambertin 1er Cru Aux Combottes

Corked.

1994 Bachelet Charmes Chambertin

Soft and underwhelming out of the bottle, with passing time, increasingly cherry and floral, and a line of precise acidity emerged, stringing the various flavors like pearls on a necklace. Within an hour of opening, lovely and persuasive. Thank you Bob.

Stickies:

Pieropan Recioto di Soave le Colombare

Dark yellow-amber. Caramel with bread dough; sweet and luscious, with balancing acidity

2010 Maculan Dindarnello

Pleasant, light, airy, sweet, balancing acidity.

1995 Von Schubert Maximin Grünhauser Auslese Fuder 56

Freshening breeze on the nose, hint of sugar, soupçon of petrol. Residual sugar well-integrated, cleansing acidity, light, smidgen of caramel and apple pie. Showing well; opened but not decanted about five hours before drinking.

Though there were 11 of us (10, not counting Nina), we showed surprising good sense and perverse restraint, leaving several enticing bottles unopened on the staging table: 2002 Huet Vouvray Le Mont demi-sec; 1985 (!) Breton Bourgueil Perrieres; 1999 Bachelet Gevrey-Chambertin1er Cru Corbeaux; 2001 Domaine de Marcoux Chateauneuf du Pape; and a gorgeous magnum of 2006 Brezeme Pergault, brought to the alter, Isaac-like, by the guest of honor himself, but spared at the last moment.

We enjoyed a nice dinner at Lavandou in Cleveland Park, and, as usual, it was the gracious, engaging company that made the evening really worthwhile.

I’ll leave it to Yule and others attending to provide accompanying narrative.

[Edited to incorporate corrections.]
 
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:

2002 Baumard Savennieres Clos du Papillon

Lanolin, super dry, but with a sense of richness from the plump texture. Precise acidity that becomes ever more so, and more intense. with air time. Strikingly good.
No kidding.

You astonish me.
 
Would've been nice to have had another data point on the '02 Le Mont Demi.

I've liked the '02 Baumard Clos Papillon. It hasn't premoxed the way the '95's and '96's have.
 
originally posted by SFJoe:
I have not been loving the Baumards since, oh, 2000 or so.

Have not had this wine any time recently.

Well, it can become tricky to partition the effect of air on wine from the effect of wine on one's powers of discrimination, but this wine seemed good early, grading up to very fine by the end of the evening. I think Bob was liking it too, fwiw.

originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
Pinot Gris is a white grape, I thought.

Right. Mark, did I write this down wrong - was it Pinot Noir?

originally posted by Chris Coad:
You left an '85 Breton unopened on the table??

Something is wrong with you people.

Also right. I blame myself.
 
The Il Glicine was a Sandro Fay Sassella.

The 85 Breton is safely back in its cellar spot, inexplicably spared a timely demise by a sudden tsunami of insanity.

The Anthill Farms wine was indeed a Pinot Gris, macerated on the skins, I heard. Coppery color.
 
The Janasse was Cuvée Chaupin. The Baumard was good (no prem-ox). The wines were opened at the other end of the table and those of us at our end were not consulted. The Trousseau stank of, um, diapers in a way that did not seem associated with cork. And the restaurant's name is Lavandou.
 
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
originally posted by Cole Kendall:
The Trousseau stank of, um, diapers in a way that did not seem associated with cork.

Sounds like MLF in bottle.
Not to be picky, but I doubt any but the craziest winemaker would bottle a red wine that hadn't finished MLF with no SO2. It would be unusual to bottle a red that wasn't done with MLF in any case.

But there are other things that different bacteria can eat than malic acid.

/biochemical pedantry.
 
Last night we opened an undrinkable 2008 Domaine Nicolas Rousset Pouilly-Fuissé "Esprit Minéral" that fit this bill, so I jumped to a color blind conclusion. But the Octavin is zero sulphur added, so some bacteria must have had a field day.
 
originally posted by SFJoe:
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
originally posted by Cole Kendall:
The Trousseau stank of, um, diapers in a way that did not seem associated with cork.

Sounds like MLF in bottle.
Not to be picky, but I doubt any but the craziest winemaker would bottle a red wine that hadn't finished MLF with no SO2. It would be unusual to bottle a red that wasn't done with MLF in any case.

But there are other things that different bacteria can eat than malic acid.

/biochemical pedantry.

i think oswaldo mis-typed and meant MILF...
 
I've consumed several bottles of the wine in question and found no diapers. I really like this wine. It seems something unpleasant may have happened to your bottle somewhere.
 
Well I'm glad Ian burned the midnight oil to get these down to pixels. Had a great time meeting many of the DC contingent for the first time and a jeebus dinner is the best way to end a trip. Being overwhelmed walking outside the halls and corridors of power of this great country and being sneered at by some of the Chief Justices questioning my right to 'occupy' the District led me to take scant notes but I have some impressions to add below

2002 Baumard Savennieres Clos du Papillon

Lanolin, super dry, but with a sense of richness from the plump texture. Precise acidity that becomes ever more so, and more intense, with air time. Strikingly good.

2000 Raveneau Chablis 1er Cru Montmains

Out of the bottle, faintest yellow, limpid and pure, piercing acidity, fairly broad, solid Chablis tangy profile. With time in the glass, increasingly streamlined, sleek, refined. Still developing at the end of dinner. My first Raveneau, thank you Yule.

1997 Clos Ste. Hune

15 years young. Freshening breeze; from the bottle, very light, mild, still closed. Very refined, increasingly intense and vibrant through the course of the evening, still unfolding as we wrapped up. Lovely and full of potential still. Thanks Cole.

Vin Gris:

2008 Anthill Pinot Gris

On the nose, bit of heather and peach, with time, hint of coffee (?). Pleasingly smooth texture, clean, possibly modest residual sugar foiling the wine’s acidity, but not sweet or flabby. With time, relaxes, so that the texture becomes more open-knit. A nice American rose.

I enjoyed the white flight most of all. The Baumard was singing, all wet wool and oyster shell...in a gorgeous place. The Montmains shows why Raveneau is considered the best in Chablis, even in a riper year like 2000: a wonderful herbal nose of tarragon, some smoky overtones with lemon oil, and wood soft to nonexistant, with piercing acidity. Great stuff. Great was also the CSH, and my first experience with it. Diesel in the nose, a nice density of grapeskin solid to the wine making giving it a substantial feel. Wonderful stuff, too bad no longer in my price range. The Anthill was cool just to look at the color, reminding me of a Heredia rose or a poulsard: copper-light salmon. It came across as sweeter than one opened 2 years ago, but this would be a good warm-weather drink.

2010 Octavin Trouseau

Fruity-vegetal nose. Sharp, biting acidity; very dry and rather flat. Some dismay among the diners and questions of corked-ness.

Stinky poop and sewage plant, but in a good way. Get beyond this and there are strawberry fields. Texturally very nice, and not mainstream at all.

2002 Belliviere le Rouge Gorge

Pinot d’Aunis (Chenin Noir?). Fruity, some bubble gum. Biting acidity and chalky texture. Interesting wine with food, but suffered from the direct comparison with its more generous brethren at the table. Gail thought this bottle may have been flawed.

This bottle was also in a good place, with the overt ground black pepper receeding from what was in earlier bottles. Still tangy, acidic, filled with tree bark after all these years. I set this aside to see if pineau d'anis ages and this bottle answers that question nicely. I didn't think anything was wrong with this, since it has a funky streak to it anyway.

2001 Paolo Bea Rosso de Montefalco

Deep, balanced, dark fruits. Pleasantly round in the mouth and undergirded by good acidity. Brilliant with lamb brouchette. With time a bit of mocha, substantial increase in volume, and a kind of firework effect in the mouth. Impressive, delicious.

My favorite red of the night, making me swallow my comment earlier about aging Bea wines (well, I still won't for the basic one or the whites). This was the middle bottling, the Montefalco Rosso Riserva otherwise known as 'Pipparello'.
Blend of 60% Sangiovese, 25% Montepulciano, 15% Sagrantino. Very floral, with fruit and gum mastic. Substance, power, depth and rustic elegance all at once.

2002 Hubert Lamy St. Aubin 1er Cru Dernier Chez Edouard

Cherry nose, balanced, plenty of structure, tannins, acidity keeping the ample fruit in check. Taut. Not bad. Decent throw-weight.

1997 Sandro Fay Sassella Il Glicine

I failed to get the whole name for this bottle. Refreshing acidity, some plummy fruit. Most interesting with food: clean, nuanced, refreshing.

1990 Janasse Chateauneuf du Pape Cuvée Chaupin

High-toned nose, spicy, prominent acidity, ample tannins, some rustic mouth friction, spicy. Did I already say spicy? A bit short on the finish. Good wine, but, personally, I haven’t found, somehow, that Burgundy and Chateuneuf du Pape go well together in sequence.

2001 Arlaud Gevrey-Chambertin 1er Cru Aux Combottes

Corked.

1994 Bachelet Charmes Chambertin

Soft and underwhelming out of the bottle, with passing time, increasingly cherry and floral, and a line of precise acidity emerged, stringing the various flavors like pearls on a necklace. Within an hour of opening, lovely and persuasive. Thank you Bob.

My attention span was fading by the time these made the rounds, but the two Burgundies needed a little more time and perhaps bigger bowls to show their stuff. The Bachelet opened gamy and smoky, and showed very metallic at first, but then when I revisited it, the metal softened and it became more of a chewy, meaty red. The Lamy was nice, in a plush, riper way, showing red fruit and floral notes. The Fay Valtellina came across as a bit modern to me and I didn't get a lot of nebbiolo character from it. Vintage maybe? The Janesse seemed to lack structure and was a little soft for me. It also showed more heat than I would have liked, and probably was not in a giving place after the two Burgundies.

Stickies:

Pieropan Recioto di Soave le Colombare

Dark yellow-amber. Caramel with bread dough; sweet and luscious, with balancing acidity

2010 Maculan Dindarnello

Pleasant, light, airy, sweet, balancing acidity.

1995 Von Schubert Maximin Grünhauser Auslese Fuder 56

Freshening breeze on the nose, hint of sugar, soupçon of petrol. Residual sugar well-integrated, cleansing acidity, light, smidgen of caramel and apple pie. Showing well; opened but not decanted about five hours before drinking.

I liked the Pieropan. This would have been nice with some biscoti. The Dindarnello was a moscato and obviously so. like munching on dried pineapple. The Von Schubert didn't seem to do anything for me, but then, I drank it after the Italian stickies so it might have gotten slobberknocked by their heavier brethren.

Anyway, a good night and one for the annals.
 
originally posted by MarkS:

2002 Belliviere le Rouge Gorge

Pinot d’Aunis (Chenin Noir?). Fruity, some bubble gum. Biting acidity and chalky texture. Interesting wine with food, but suffered from the direct comparison with its more generous brethren at the table. Gail thought this bottle may have been flawed.

This bottle was also in a good place, with the overt ground black pepper receeding from what was in earlier bottles. Still tangy, acidic, filled with tree bark after all these years. I set this aside to see if pineau d'anis ages and this bottle answers that question nicely. I didn't think anything was wrong with this, since it has a funky streak to it anyway.

I have a bottle of the 2005 Hommage à Louis Derré put away to see how it ages.
For a red from the Loir it is a huge wine, and I'm not sure what will happen with age.

I enjoyed the 02 Baumard Savennieres Clos du Papillon too.
 
I think y'all just needed to give the Trouseau more air - I left it alone and it became very lovely - and a surprisingly good chaser to pate d'campagne on bread with dijon mustard and cornichon!
 
Back
Top