Another vexing bottle of 2002 Rougeard Brézé. It has a gunpowder thing on the nose, that I think is sulfur and Jim thinks is wood. It's probably both. The acidity is also prominent and a bit prickly, or spritzy, as Jim put it. We decanted it, which helped. The nose was always captivating, but the palate was jarring. At the very end, it showed its best, but the acid was still very intense. This wine was ELECTRIC as a young wine, though much woodier (the famous bottle from when Nathan met Levi at Lyle's was very woody). So, it both disappointed and intrigued. Maybe it needs another 20 years before we even think about it, maybe it'll never live up to the promise it seemed to show. Like I said, vexing.
My first bottle of 2005 Mugnier Maréchale was much easier to understand. I thought that maybe this would be a 2005 that was starting to show something and we weren't disappointed. It is certainly too early to start digging in to these, but I've been curious for a while and I've got more. Opened for an hour or so and then decanted at the restaurant. The whole cluster is apparent from the nose and the palate is staid but with real finishing fruit that lingers, all good signs. As the night went on the nose opened with more fruit and spice, much more a Mugnier wine than something I would nail as Nuits, but then again, Faiveley put their house style on it too and no one else has made it in my lifetime, so who knows. Maybe the Mugnier version is it. Well, in a very real way, it is it. Someone trying to make Chambolle in Nuits. For all that, it is a wine of immense promise and was interesting and enjoyable. I took one for the team so you don't have to. I think 5-7 more years should get it in a place for me.
2012 Huet Haut-Lieu Sec on the porch in the sun catching up with Jim. I don't really get the consternation around the Huet 2012s. This wine has always been delicious. It's a nicely generous version of Sec, with all the flavors you'd expect. Some rough edges that may not be smoothed out, but a fine enough tipple. Served its purpose well.