Pascal Moulin-a-Vent 2005. A couple of these have been deliciously open, a couple flawed, and several hard to read. This bottle started off thin and weedy the first night. As with the the 05 Vissoux Poncie from last week, however, on the second night, it showed very fine, with Burgundy-like transparency and lift, accompanying the ruddier, slightly grittier Beaujolais flavor profile. Like Lays potato chips, one sip leads to the next. Drink now with 1-2 hours decanting, or hold a few more years.
I've read about gamay 'pinoter'-ing, but haven't found much myself to compare in the flavors of wines made from these two varieties, even with age. I am finding convergence in the body-texture blend, though - a pleasant discovery, because it's largely this characteristic what draws me to red Burgundy. The more older Beaujolais I try, the better value I discern, even the newly fashionable, $35-40 'super-premium' bottles.