TN: LDM Young and Old

Mike Evans

Mike Evans
TN: LDM YOUNG AND OLD - (8/19/2013)

Monday evening, Chamblee retailer Le Caveau hosted Kevin McKenna (the "M" in LDM Wines a/k/a Louis/Dressner Selections) and the charming Josefa Concannon, who I'd met during a prior visit to Atlanta, for a tasting of some of their current releases. The LDM portfolio is fairly new to Georgia, so I pulled some older selections from my cellar to share with the other attendees, our host Eric Brown, and the honored guests.

My notes are from memory and I'm omitting a slew of wines that I liked, but don't remember well enough to post impressions on. I was just having way too much fun visiting with Kevin, Josefa, and friends old and new in one of the most enjoyable evenings of wine and people I've had in a long time. I fell in love with a number of LDM wines about 18 years ago when a friend first introduced me to the portfolio, so it took some effort not to swoon like a schoolgirl at a One Direction concert when meeting Kevin for the first time, but he could not have been more gracious and enthusiastic. My only regret is that the evening passed too quickly, but I eagerly await Kevin and Josefa's next visit to Atlanta.

New Releases

2011 Domaine des Terres Dorées (Jean-Paul Brun) Beaujolais Blanc - France, Burgundy, Beaujolais

Pure white fruit, and while not terribly complex, it's tasty and refreshing.

2010 Domaine de Roally Viré-Clessé Tradition - France, Burgundy, M“connais, Viré-Clessé

A clean expression of chardonnay that is tasty now, with lavender and vanilla scented peary/appley fruit, some noticeable residual sugar in the Thevenet/Goyard style, but no botrytis. I'm not sure it has the acidity to carry it too long, but acid can be a sneaky thing, particularly when there is residual sugar, and I just had a small taste, so I can't conclude with certainty that there isn't more structure lurking below the surface.

2011 Domaine Bernard Baudry Chinon Le Domaine - France, Loire Valley, Touraine, Chinon

Mouthwateringly crisp fruit + a little earthiness and minerality = a real challenge to drink with moderation.

2011 Éric Texier Côtes du Rhône-Brézème - France, Rhône, Northern Rhône, Côtes du Rhône-Brézème

It seemed a little reduced at first, but that blew off pretty quickly, allowing the brambleberry fruit and a touch of white pepper and chalky minerality to shine without distraction. The fruit is supported by prounounced acidity that I found to be pleasantly tart and well-integrated, but that some may find to be a bit shrill.

Older Selections

1998 Clos Roche Blanche Touraine Cuvée Buster - France, Loire Valley, Touraine

This has held up surprisingly well, showing its age in the light gold color and a nutty hint of oxidation, but still deliciously fruity, modestly complex with a little mint adding some interest, and retaining enough acidity to keep it from being flabby, it was really quite nice. Drink 'em up, if you (like me) were negligent enough to hold them this long, but at least for this bottle, the aging experiment paid off.

2000 Franck Peillot Roussette du Bugey Cuvée Buster Altesse de Montagnieu - France, Savoie, Roussette du Bugey

Another aging experiment that paid off. Subtle layers of flowers, zingy lemony pears, and rocks, with just a little nuttiness, it was much fresher than I'd expected, and held up well over the course of the evening.

1997 Coudert Fleurie Clos de la Roilette Cuvée Tardive - France, Burgundy, Beaujolais, Fleurie

A little bretty at first, but that faded into the background as the wine opened up with air, turning into a brilliant and harmonious compote of earth, herbs, leather, and sweet strawberry fruit with enough acidity left to keep it sharp. I can't imagine that it will get any better, but it was probably my favorite wine of the night and my last taste, after it had been open for a few hours and the bottle was nearly empty, may have been the best.

1999 Éric Texier Côtes du Rhône-Brézème - France, Rhône, Northern Rhône, Côtes du Rhône-Brézème

Surprisingly primary and youthful, the color was almost identical to the 2011 tasted with it, with only a slight ruby corona suggesting that this was the older wine. Smoked meat, minerals, and black pepper bring savory complexity to ripe but tart fruit and help to balance the prominent, but to me not offputting, level of acidity. This bottle suggests years of remaining life, but I'm not sure whether this is a representative sample.

1996 Domaine Bernard Baudry Chinon La Croix Boissée - France, Loire Valley, Touraine, Chinon

When first opened, it was just a muddled, toneless slurry of tannin, earth, and leather. But it transformed after vigorous swirling brought out tart acidity and sweet brambly fruit that added definition and freshness, and hints of olive that bridged the gap between the fruit and the earth and leather. The sweet fruit and savory aspects continued to integrate over the course of the evening, making me wish I'd opened it earlier in the day, but it was still very enjoyable.

2000 Domaine de la Pépière (Marc Ollivier) Muscadet de Sèvre-et-Maine Sur Lie Vieilles Vignes Clos des Briords - France, Loire Valley, Pays Nantais, Muscadet de Sèvre-et-Maine

Corked and oxidized. (NR/flawed)
 
Yeah Mike! Glad you are back. I've been tempted to cellar a few bottles of Peillot for a few years (in the name of science), and you have beat me to it.
 
originally posted by Jay Miller:
Ah, the 1999 Brezeme acidity. I remember that.

Is it the regular or the Mise Tardive?

Eric and I had a really good bottle of the Mise Tardive the last time (or time before) when he was in town.

That wine went through all sorts of peaks and valleys.
 
originally posted by Jay Miller:
Ah, the 1999 Brezeme acidity. I remember that.

It has been years since I'd had the '99 (this was the first from half a case I recently found buried deep during an ongoing and long-overdue cellar inventory), but the acidity wasn't as as overwhelming as I remember from the wine's youth (which is probably why these were buried in the first place).
 
originally posted by Don Rice:
Yeah Mike! Glad you are back. I've been tempted to cellar a few bottles of Peillot for a few years (in the name of science), and you have beat me to it.

Thanks, Don. I've aged both Busters and regular Altesse from '98, '99, and '00, victims of poor organization and what has historically been a lack of an appreciative audience locally. Fortunately, both are changing, so I will try to post notes of my findings. At worst, I'll drink them so others don't have to. But if you are ever back in Atlanta . . . .
 
Peillot would not advocate these long waits, but I bet he'd be glad the wine showed well. Likewise CRB.

That '99 Brezeme really did have some acid.
 
originally posted by SFJoe:
Peillot would not advocate these long waits, but I bet he be glad the wine showed well. Likewise CRB.

That '99 Brezeme really did have some acid.

Joe, I'm impressed. That sounds like a direct quote from a conversation a friend had with Peillot last fall when discussing the '98 or '99 Altesse (it may have been a Buster as well) and '00 Monduese I poured a few weeks earlier. The Altesse was slightly oxidized, but had enough fruit left that it was still enjoyable, and the Mondeuse was surprisingly fresh.

That said, the positive notes for some of the wines that I've held way too long can be attributed in part to the fact that I've been opening bottles with good color. I know there are some that haven't made it, which makes me feel guilty because they deserved to be enjoyed and I wasted them.
 
originally posted by SFJoe:
That '99 Brezeme really did have some acid.
So did the 2000 Brezeme Vielle Vignes which has begun to develop some nice bottle sweetness with age to balance that acidity. Its drinking very nice right now. Only got a couple of bottles left of the 99 myself (regular, not Tardive) and have been holding off drinking them too as I consider it one of my cellar treasures :-). As I recall the 99 developed a light floculant sediment that requires standing them up for a week or so to get it to settle before decanting.
 
I listened to McKenna's interview with Levi Dalton this morning, which gives nice historical survey of LDM. I was puzzled by his description of fermentation in ceramic egg containers, though, which sounded identical with carbonic. Is there a difference?
 
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
I listened to McKenna's interview with Levi Dalton this morning, which gives nice historical survey of LDM. I was puzzled by his description of fermentation in ceramic egg containers, though, which sounded identical with carbonic. Is there a difference?

Ceramic? Maybe concrete?

Material is first about porosity, second about chemical reactivity, maybe third about electrical conductivity and static charge?

Shape is about convection, lees contact, surface/volume, etc.

Your guide to containers.
 
originally posted by Everett Bandman:
originally posted by SFJoe:
That '99 Brezeme really did have some acid.
So did the 2000 Brezeme Vielle Vignes which has begun to develop some nice bottle sweetness with age to balance that acidity. Its drinking very nice right now. Only got a couple of bottles left of the 99 myself (regular, not Tardive) and have been holding off drinking them too as I consider it one of my cellar treasures :-).

It is, and since I'm out you are invited to jeeb in Durham any time you wish, and bring a bottle of 1999.
 
originally posted by SFJoe:
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
I listened to McKenna's interview with Levi Dalton this morning, which gives nice historical survey of LDM. I was puzzled by his description of fermentation in ceramic egg containers, though, which sounded identical with carbonic. Is there a difference?

Ceramic? Maybe concrete?

Material is first about porosity, second about chemical reactivity, maybe third about electrical conductivity and static charge?

Shape is about convection, lees contact, surface/volume, etc.

Your guide to containers.

The conversation segued from clay amphorae directly to the eggs, so I thought clay, for which 'ceramic' is an adequate stand-in. Possibly the word 'concrete' was used and I overlooked it.

McKenna first talked about how sealing the atmosphere in the egg forced fermentation to take place within the grape. Then discussion moved to the role played by the egg's shape in promoting must convection during fermentation.

The first part (sealing, fermentation inside grape) sounded to me like carbonic.
 
Many thanks to you, Mike for sharing treasures from your cellar - it was a great education for many people and most generous of you. Marvining with one of my sales reps the following day allowed him to sell the current Brezeme with great authority on how it would evolve over time. Thanks to Eric Brown for putting the event together. It was indeed a lovely evening of wine and conversation with so many enthusiastic people. I look forward to my next visit to Atlanta. Kevin may beat me there this year but there are talks in the works for a tour in the spring - Athens, Savannah and Atlanta. Like Sherman, only with wine.
 
originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by Everett Bandman:
originally posted by SFJoe:
That '99 Brezeme really did have some acid.
So did the 2000 Brezeme Vielle Vignes which has begun to develop some nice bottle sweetness with age to balance that acidity. Its drinking very nice right now. Only got a couple of bottles left of the 99 myself (regular, not Tardive) and have been holding off drinking them too as I consider it one of my cellar treasures :-).

It is, and since I'm out you are invited to jeeb in Durham any time you wish, and bring a bottle of 1999.
Will do. I do travel xcountry some and next time I'm close to your neck of the woods, I'll give you the heads up....Everett
 
Back
Top