Claude Kolm
Claude Kolm
originally posted by Rahsaan:
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
I was going to say hurrah!, someone finally has begun importing Bergdolt Sankt Lamprecht, and then I got to the last sentence of your note on the wine. The Weissburgunders need 7-8 years of age and then they challenge and can resemble aged Chablis.
Yes, my in-laws brought a few over for me. I liked the remains of the bottle later that night at home and thought there was some nice elegance to the structure (terroir?) although it was a touch hot (14%) and was not going to win awards for being flashy, which was a minus at that dinner.
Otherwise, I mostly agree with Brad although felt no need to bestow WOTN on either the Donnhoff or the Prum as they both had a lot of pleasure to give me.
Hopefully, they brought some of Bergdolt's Rieslings and Spätburgunders, too -- both topnotch, and in fact, Bergdolt, although less famous, is up there with all the other big Spätburgunder names, IMO, which is saying something.
Looking at my notes on Bergdolt's 2011 Weissburgunders, I tasted five at the estate last September, and the GG clearly was the one that I liked the least -- it was overdone compared to the Kabinett trockens and "S" trockens that I had there. Overdoing GGs is less common than it used to be, but it still remains a somewhat easy trap to fall into in a ripe, moderate acid vintage such as 2011. The 2011 St. Lamprecht "S" Weissburgunder trocken is a genuinely thrilling wine.
I don't recall ever having Bergdolt's Sekt, but Bill Hooper speaks very highly of them.