Jeff Grossman
Jeff Grossman
attendees: Jay, Jeff, Ray, Joe (not SF) and his sister and BIL, Tim
I arrived first and, with several hours available, I opened Cantina Ar Pe Pe 2004 Valtellina Superiore Grumello Riserva "Rocca de Piro" because there would be time for it to open and develop. A nice bottle of this: mountain wine, crisp and pure, bright cherry and roses nebbiolo, some dirt but no tar; vini di meditazione.
After a while, Jay arrives, aflutter, but he goes swiftly to work and opens H. Lignier 1995 Chambolle-Musigny which is another bottle from the Jekyll and Hyde lot. This Villages wine is in fine shape: no browning or deepening of the color, just barely approaching its maturity, good ripeness (cherry, not berry) and grip.
Around 5:30 pm our remaining fellows arrive at the table and it turns into Corkzapoppin'!!! First we have some warm wine for the cold weather outside, Clos des Papes 2000 Chateauneuf-du-Pape is grenachey and warming but not particularly floral or attractive. Someone finally has the sense to open a white, Ch. Soucherie 2011 Anjou Blanc "Cuvee Les Rangs de Long", from a house more famous for Savennieres and Coteaux du Layon, this is chenin vinified dry and let sit on the fine lees for 8 months. It is peachy and crisp and a lovely little wine.
Still thirsty, and sensing further opportunity to open bottles, and even though time is running out on us, we keep going. Next opened is Dom. Antonin Guyon 1971 Chambolle-Musigny, from 375ml, pale pinky-red and potent: a vivid and promiscuous bouquet that gets even better with a few minutes of air. The palate is quite lean, perhaps unattractively so, but what a nose!
Thrust: Ch. Gruaud-Larose 1952 Saint-Julien, from 375ml, quickly throws off its tinny bed-clothes and wakes up to offer a gorgeous old Bordeaux palate of tobacco and earth and dark red fruit. Pretty texture, too.
And counter-thrust: Dom. Antonin Guyon 1999 Corton "Clos du Roy", this bottle is attributed to "Dom. Hippolyte Thevenot", one of their numerous bookkeeping entities. The wine is vigorous, nicely ripe, shapely acidity, way too young to drink, of course, and not recognizably Corton to me (but I am most familiar with the Ch. de Briaille version so I can claim no grand expertise).
Overall, lovely wines, good company, and a pleasant evening.
I arrived first and, with several hours available, I opened Cantina Ar Pe Pe 2004 Valtellina Superiore Grumello Riserva "Rocca de Piro" because there would be time for it to open and develop. A nice bottle of this: mountain wine, crisp and pure, bright cherry and roses nebbiolo, some dirt but no tar; vini di meditazione.
After a while, Jay arrives, aflutter, but he goes swiftly to work and opens H. Lignier 1995 Chambolle-Musigny which is another bottle from the Jekyll and Hyde lot. This Villages wine is in fine shape: no browning or deepening of the color, just barely approaching its maturity, good ripeness (cherry, not berry) and grip.
Around 5:30 pm our remaining fellows arrive at the table and it turns into Corkzapoppin'!!! First we have some warm wine for the cold weather outside, Clos des Papes 2000 Chateauneuf-du-Pape is grenachey and warming but not particularly floral or attractive. Someone finally has the sense to open a white, Ch. Soucherie 2011 Anjou Blanc "Cuvee Les Rangs de Long", from a house more famous for Savennieres and Coteaux du Layon, this is chenin vinified dry and let sit on the fine lees for 8 months. It is peachy and crisp and a lovely little wine.
Still thirsty, and sensing further opportunity to open bottles, and even though time is running out on us, we keep going. Next opened is Dom. Antonin Guyon 1971 Chambolle-Musigny, from 375ml, pale pinky-red and potent: a vivid and promiscuous bouquet that gets even better with a few minutes of air. The palate is quite lean, perhaps unattractively so, but what a nose!
Thrust: Ch. Gruaud-Larose 1952 Saint-Julien, from 375ml, quickly throws off its tinny bed-clothes and wakes up to offer a gorgeous old Bordeaux palate of tobacco and earth and dark red fruit. Pretty texture, too.
And counter-thrust: Dom. Antonin Guyon 1999 Corton "Clos du Roy", this bottle is attributed to "Dom. Hippolyte Thevenot", one of their numerous bookkeeping entities. The wine is vigorous, nicely ripe, shapely acidity, way too young to drink, of course, and not recognizably Corton to me (but I am most familiar with the Ch. de Briaille version so I can claim no grand expertise).
Overall, lovely wines, good company, and a pleasant evening.