Wines from a week in Arizona:
2003 Taurino Salice Salentino Riserva was chosen with some trepidation at a restaurant in Sedona with a limited selection. What a pleasant surprise! Starting off with the characteristic medicinal notes before opening up as a medium-bodied wine with vibrant fruit and lively acidity. How they managed to pull this off in Puglia in the Summer of Hell I have no idea, but I'm not complaining.
2006 Gnarly Head Zinfandel was about as exciting as one would expect from the colorful name. The best that can be said for it was that the fruit was varietally correct.
2007 St. Urbans-Hof Riesling Okfener Bockstein Sptlese was our white choice for Thanksgiving dinner (non-turkey) and didn't disappoint. Lithe, juicy and abounding with fruit of a lime-peach sort, it had great delineation and minerality in a package of overall delicacy. Really a great wine, and another step toward making Jean a Riesling-lover.
1998 Louis Jadot Corton was the red wine choice for the meal and not one made with the greatest confidence from a list of questionable Burgundy choices. Alas, this wine showed the flaws of the year in my opinion. What I had initially hoped was a bit of closed-in character for this wine proved, on later inspection, to be insufficient fruit mid-palate. Austere and charmless, sadly.
2004 Brndlmayer Grner Veltliner Langenloiser Berg-Vogelsang was the sole wine chosen for our post-Thanksgiving meal at the Mosaic restaurant in Scottsdale. (Visitors to the area could do a lot worse than dining here, as the wine list is one of the most interesting I've run across in ages) In a beautiful place right now, this wine retains great minerality and green pea character while having rounded out somewhat. Floral in the nose and citrusy on the palate, it paired beautifully with our shellfish dishes.
Mark Lipton
2003 Taurino Salice Salentino Riserva was chosen with some trepidation at a restaurant in Sedona with a limited selection. What a pleasant surprise! Starting off with the characteristic medicinal notes before opening up as a medium-bodied wine with vibrant fruit and lively acidity. How they managed to pull this off in Puglia in the Summer of Hell I have no idea, but I'm not complaining.
2006 Gnarly Head Zinfandel was about as exciting as one would expect from the colorful name. The best that can be said for it was that the fruit was varietally correct.
2007 St. Urbans-Hof Riesling Okfener Bockstein Sptlese was our white choice for Thanksgiving dinner (non-turkey) and didn't disappoint. Lithe, juicy and abounding with fruit of a lime-peach sort, it had great delineation and minerality in a package of overall delicacy. Really a great wine, and another step toward making Jean a Riesling-lover.
1998 Louis Jadot Corton was the red wine choice for the meal and not one made with the greatest confidence from a list of questionable Burgundy choices. Alas, this wine showed the flaws of the year in my opinion. What I had initially hoped was a bit of closed-in character for this wine proved, on later inspection, to be insufficient fruit mid-palate. Austere and charmless, sadly.
2004 Brndlmayer Grner Veltliner Langenloiser Berg-Vogelsang was the sole wine chosen for our post-Thanksgiving meal at the Mosaic restaurant in Scottsdale. (Visitors to the area could do a lot worse than dining here, as the wine list is one of the most interesting I've run across in ages) In a beautiful place right now, this wine retains great minerality and green pea character while having rounded out somewhat. Floral in the nose and citrusy on the palate, it paired beautifully with our shellfish dishes.
Mark Lipton