Sippage

Florida Jim

Florida Jim
2005 Clos de la Roilette, Fleurie Cuve Tardive:
When first opened, simply too much for me. Recorked and left on the counter overnight. 24 hours later its a superb, old-viney Fleurie with a core of focused flavors and burgeoning complexity. Lots of concentration here and plenty of stuffing to last the decade or so it probably needs. Still, with a little air, mighty fine.

2005 Foreau, Vouvray Sec:
Pretty fruit on the nose but, on the palate, too early to the glass when first opened. Recorked and put back in the cellar. All wool aromatically on day two but better in the mouth with ripe chenin fruit, a strong mineral undercurrent and a lanolin note; intense and long. Needs a lot of cellar time.

2005 Cellar Magic, Sauvignon Blanc:
Made by friends in Sonoma from Amador County fruit. Vinous, no grassy or cat pee smells, pleasant citrus and some tropical hints, 13.5 abv with a crisp, clean delivery. Good with lighter fare or on its own.

2005 de Villaine, Bourgogne (blanc) Les Clous:
Great wine, young wine; ideal balance, lovely mineral tones amid equally charming fruit. Obviously, will benefit from cellaring. $25; stealing.

2007 Dnnhoff, Riesling:
This is the bottom-end Estate riesling from this producer but one would have a tough time convincing me there is anything bottom-end about it. Bright, clean riesling scents with a lightly honeyed tone, some flint and spring water; lightly sweet in the mouth but plenty of mineral driven acidity - lovely balance, nuanced flavors some fresh cherry/cherry pit, excellent length. Imagine you are very thirsty and you get that first taste of mountain stream water; thats the feeling this delivers with each sip. A fascinating wine and one with a future, no doubt. 10% abv.

Best, Jim
 
Does "winey" mean simple and grapey or something else?

jb (from The People's Wine Descriptor Deconstruction Front)
 
originally posted by Florida Jim:

2007 Dnnhoff, Riesling:
This is the bottom-end Estate riesling from this producer but one would have a tough time convincing me there is anything bottom-end about it. . . . A fascinating wine and one with a future, no doubt.

I stumbled on a bottle of the '98 Qba while moving some bottles around earlier this week. I'll fire it up for a datapoint at the earliest opportunity. The last '98 I had was a few years ago, but it was still a lovely thing.

Cheers,

Dave
 
originally posted by Bwood:
Does "winey" mean simple and grapey or something else?

My usage is simply that it smells/tastes like wine and would not be confused with anything else. Deconstructed: the product of the fermentation of vinifera.
Its not meant to be either a good or bad thing. Its just when that taste/smell is so distinct as to be notable.
Best, Jim
 
originally posted by Florida Jim:
originally posted by Bwood:
Does "winey" mean simple and grapey or something else?

My usage is simply that it smells/tastes like wine and would not be confused with anything else. Deconstructed: the product of the fermentation of vinifera.
Its not meant to be either a good or bad thing. Its just when that taste/smell is so distinct as to be notable.
Best, Jim

I think what's confusing people is that wine smells like a lot of different things, so "it smells like wine" could lead you down a lot of very different roads.
 
originally posted by Chris Coad:
originally posted by Florida Jim:
originally posted by Bwood:
Does "winey" mean simple and grapey or something else?

My usage is simply that it smells/tastes like wine and would not be confused with anything else. Deconstructed: the product of the fermentation of vinifera.
Its not meant to be either a good or bad thing. Its just when that taste/smell is so distinct as to be notable.
Best, Jim

I think what's confusing people is that wine smells like a lot of different things, so "it smells like wine" could lead you down a lot of very different roads.

Hence, my "product of fermentation" comment.
Best, Jim
 
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