TN: Dressner Yahrzeit (Oct 19, 2012)

Jeff Grossman

Jeff Grossman
attendees: Brad, Jay & Arnold, SFJoe, Cliff, Levi, Greg, Don & Melissa, Manuel & Josie, Cesar, Lou & BettyLu, Chris & Lisa, Jayson & Laura, Sharon, Denyse, Jeff G

It has been a year since Joe Dressner passed on. There are many beautiful remembrances of him up on the LDM website; worth a look if you have not seen it already.

The NYC-based friends and customers gathered for a dinner and to swap stories. We have heard many of them before... dropping off bottles at Minetta but not staying for the meal, refilling a Burgundy bottle with wine by Brian Loring, visits with winemakers, urgent nonsense on various wine boards, always the bicycle, and Buster... and more.

There were lots of eats, both store-bought and homemade:
- breads & cheeses & charcuterie
- chopped salad, quinoa salad, wild rice salad
- broiled pork, tea-smoked duck, beef stew
- mushroom soup, mushroom bread pudding, creamy morels
- key lime pie, pear tart, apple tart

And, lots of LD/LDM wine, of course:

Pepiere 2004 Muscadet "Clos des Briords" - a slight whiff of cheese at first but that blows off; lemon and tangerine and granite; long finish; yum

Brun NV Vin Mousseux Aromatique de Qualite Medium Dry "FRV100" - its usual self: a bit sweet, rose syrup and cherry juice

Robert Denis 1995 Touraine-Azay-le-Rideau Demi-Sec "Vignes de la Gaillarderie" - The story told about Denis is that he made really, really old-style wine which was often unapproachable when young. He famously told SFJoe(?) not to drink a particular bottle for 30 years and, if he didn't like it, to bring it back. This is not that bottle but you get the idea. Don decanted this one two days ago because we only waited 17 years to open it: complex, youthful, talc and multi-fruit, sweet flowers, a rich mouthfeel but also tingly acidity, wow

Pinon NV Touraine Brut Rose - Jayson does not recall exactly which vintage this wine is from... "It's been in my 'drink next' box for 2 or 3 years."; there's something vaguely pink-berry about it but it's basically shut down, hold longer

Pepiere 2002 Muscadet "Clos des Briords" - much the same wine as the '04 but this is more lemony and less minerally

Pepiere 1997 Muscadet "Cuvee Buster" - the early form of the Clisson; full-on clementine (by which I mean, sweeter and broader flavor than lemon), incredibly intense and vivid, the finish is very long and bright and veers towards red-fruited, amazing wine, Thunderbird award

Pepiere 1997 Muscadet "Clos des Briords" - damaged, several people who should know vet it, though SFJoe observes that this wine is botrytised and won't smell like the others

Dom du Closel 2004 Savennieres "Clos du Papillon" - a pristine bottle with very little of that common oxidative funk, acidity good, chalk?

Cazin 2001 Cheverny - sauvignon blanc and chardonnay, zippy, lots of mixed rocks-ness (chalk, granite, slate) in here, a slight metallic tang, too

Cazin 2006 Cour-Cheverny - not the Cuvee Renaissance; this is a whopping huge grapefruit with a bit of fatty weight in my glass!, yum

Luneau-Papin 1989 Muscadet "Le L d'Or" - young cheese and grain and green grapes, soft velvet feel, more interesting than exciting

Chidaine 2005 Montlouis "Les Tuffeaux" - a note of bitter orange pith underlines an otherwise not very interesting chalky chenin

Baudry 2011 Chinon Blanc - glou-glou, good zing

Belliviere 2010 Coteaux du Loir "Rouge Gorge" - white pepper, strawberry, iodine, we like this!

Occhipinti 2010 Frappato - lush texture, fragrance of overripe strawberries and wet driveway, we like this, too!

Ch Sainte-Anne 1998 Bandol "Cuvee Collection" - tannic, pretty in a "wild cherry" cough drop kind of way, wee touch of shoe polish, likable

Marechal 2005 Savigny-les-Beaunes 1er "Les Lavieres" - crisp and bright, flavors of deep-dark currant, very pure, very ripe, I think I could be jealous of folks who have some of this stored away

Pepiere 2002 Muscadet "Cuvee Eden" - more tutti-frutti than lemon, a tad sweeter than the others, too

Clos Roches Blanches 2008 Touraine "Cuvee Gamay" - typique!

Mayr-Nusser 2000 Lagrein Riserva - structure has softened a lot, tastes of red fruit leather and violets, late meaty notes revive the cooked fruit flavors back up towards freshness

Filliatreau 1997 Saumur-Champigny "Cuvee Buster" - oh, that's pretty wine! quite a bit of bell pepper on top of a sturdy cabernet wine

Clos Rougeard 1997 Saumur-Champigny "Les Poyeux" - more earth and less green than the Filliatreau, strong black tea and good acid, yum

Farou 1989 Chinon "Clos du Parc" - very red-fruity, and strongly nutty, no 'green' at all, and quite soft

Clos Rougeard 1997 Saumur-Champigny "Le Bourg" - really just like the Poyeux but 'bigger' all the way round (by which I mean that the flavors are more vivid)

Clos de la Roilette 2006 Fleurie - a noticeable difference from the recent few as this is a medium-weight wine, not so heavy; typical gamay red-fruitiness; still way young and not showing all it has

Brun 2010 Morgon - beautiful, rocks and a whiff of tarragon, silky texture; I am gratified to have some of this in storage

Breton 1989 Bourgueil "Grandmont" - all my note says is: "perfect" (but my private little scoring system 'only' ranks it with '04 Pepiere, Occhipinti, and Poyeux which is below Denis, '97 Buster, and Bourg)

O. Raffault 1998 Chinon "Les Picasses" - magnum; lean (by which I mean less ripe and less sweet than usual), just acquiring its earthy secondary characteristics, yum

Petits Quarts 1996 Bonnezeaux 1ere Trie "Le Malabe" - black label; nicely done, good balance of acid and sweet

Dom du Closel 1997 Savennieres Moelleux "Cuvee Isa" - much more gentle and subtle than the Bonnezeaux, this is meant more for talking with friends than for slinging sugar
 
Better you than me, friend. This was an avalanche of wine, interrupted by Kane's insistent Julie-the-Cruise-Director act and performance demands. We'd have done better to tase him and just carry on with the evening.

Lots of damn good food, though.

The '95 Denis was quite startling to me. So approachable after such a long time of reticence. The '97 Pepiere Buster keeps its place as my favorite Muscadet ever. SFJoe's morels, oh. my. god. Jay's soup? Warm and creamy and comforting. Laura's bread pudding may not have quite hit the moist note it hit last time, but it was damn good. And plenty of good smoked meats and cheeses. I missed the beef stew, sadly. But I spent a while wandering in circles around the neighborhood.

Also, who is this "Joe" guy everyone seems to be talking about?
 
So there are still good bottles of 08 CRB Gamay under fake cork? The last two I tried were tired, but I hadn't stored them.
 
Lots there I'd love to try try, but Pepiere Cuvee Buster, wow! Never knew there was such a wine. It sounds fabulous.

The basic 05 Marechal Gravel was pretty tasty recently. Earlier bottles seemed on the sweet/ripe side, but this one was shedding a bit of that and getting more savory.

Awesome notes, thanks Jeff.
 
Thanks so much for the notes from a wonderful evening. That was a lot of wine! It was the first time I've had the 97 Pepiere Buster -- what a beautiful wine! I think I liked the Filliatreau a bit more. Just one quick nit: it was the 2006 Coudert.
 
So M. Denis didn't give his money-back guarantee to me. I believe it was Joe Dressner, David Lillie, Robert Callahan, and maybe Jeff Connell. I had the story from Joe. The punch line, of course, was that Denis was 75 or 80 at the time. Don was very wise to decant it well in advance, the old guy was not shy with the SO2.

Amazing to see the Farou finally showing a blossom or two. It's had a long winter.

There was also a very tasty '96 Olga Raffault.

I thought the '97s showed very well, but the Bourg still has a fair bit of tannin that is reassuring about the long term.

Great work on the notes, thanks much.
 
Having had a few tight or funky bottles I just wanted to give the Denis time to fully awaken from its slumber, give it a chance to shake off its sleep-funk and show us its happy side.

In hindsight a one-day decant might have been better strategy. Did anyone else taste the slight oxidative note in the finish early on? Happily, as it opened the fruit took center stage and any concern became a nonissue.
 
originally posted by Don Rice:
Did anyone else taste the slight oxidative note in the finish early on? Happily, as it opened the fruit took center stage and any concern became a nonissue.

I tried it pretty early on and thought it was beautiful, especially in this demi-sec incarnation.
 
'02 Briords dregs tonight are fantastic. Woot woot! to whoever left that behind.

Jumping onto the bandwagon of praise for the 97 Pepiere Buster. It's a wine I won't ever forget.

But the best thing about the evening was the body of work, the oeuvre of Joe, Denyse and Kevin during those years. Life affirming stuff in a glass. Wines, as Manuel said, that can turn a shitty day into a good one. Thanks, Joe.
 
originally posted by Don Rice:

In hindsight a one-day decant might have been better strategy. Did anyone else taste the slight oxidative note in the finish early on? Happily, as it opened the fruit took center stage and any concern became a nonissue.

Agreed. You and I had the conversation there. When you first brought it out and it was first poured, it did have a bit too much of an oxidized profile for me, but the longer it stayed it my glass, the more it dissipated. I agree with your one day decant however, given how the last bottle showed at your place with no decant.
 
Thanks for the pictures Brad, it almost makes me feel like I was there, and I really, really, wish I had been.

The 1997 Filliatreau Buster was the first Buster I ever had. At the original Slanted Door, thanks to Mark's great list (not the only wine that was a first to me off that list) with my parents. It was the wine that extended my admiration of LDM to them.

There are a bunch of great wines you opened. I miss Joe and I'm looking forward to seeing most or all of you when I'm in NY for the portfolio tasting.

That 1996 Raffault was probably over the hill.
 
So the take-away is that Jay has shaved, but Chris has not?

Great event, thanks, Jeff and Brad. The gothic picture could be a disorder tee-shirt print. Kudos for continuing to wake Joe.
 
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