TN: May Day dinner with Ignacio Villalgordo (May 1, 2014)

Jeff Grossman

Jeff Grossman
attendees: Ignacio, Brad, Jay, Jeff, Jayson, Josie + Manual, Ross

Ah, Cafe Loup. Plus ca change....

Whites first

Dom de la Pepiere 2012 Muscadet "Clos des Briords" - a slightly low fill in this bottle so we'll drink rather than hold; steel and lemon and a late honey-bitter tang that is so great; long, fresh, full of acid, wow

Rhys 2010 Chardonnay, Horseshoe Vineyard - zingy, underripe peaches and green grapes, crisp, pure, elegant, outstanding

Clos Saron 2012 "Carte Blanche" - bottle 43 of 1472; the website says it's a blend of albarino, verdelho, and chardonnay; "it tastes like all of them and none of them" -Manuel; good acidity but there is something unpleasant in the nose (I call brimstone, Manuel just says funky)

Toro Albala 1950 Amontillado - made of PX; not sweet, mouth-filling, powerful, not very oxidative, an amazingly youthful bottle; oh yes, about the bottle: it is from a limited release so the makers went all-out: it has lead trim in the shape of grape leaves and bunches around the neck, a cordon in the colors of the flag of Spain, three kinds of wax stamps, and the label itself is a curl of wood with the label info burned into it

Ulysse Collin NV Blanc de Blancs, Extra Brut "Les Pierrieres" - lot 09, disgorged 7/13/13; hard to taste after the intense amontillado but this is gorgeous, crisp, medium leesy

Reds next

Peter Michael 1999 "Les Pavots" - modern, clean, boring, not good but not bad until the finish, which is bitter, seems young for 15 years, not recommended

Renaissance 1999 Cabernet Sauvignon "Vin de Terroir" - wow, an actual cult wine! complex, good acidity, still lots of fine tannins, more roasted peach than black currants, "elegance but no presence" -Ignacio

Mayacamas 1992 Cabernet Sauvignon - vigorous, forthright cab sauv scents and flavors, still stern so if you have 'em, hold 'em

Sterling 1974 Cabernet Sauvignon, Reserve - a beauty, perfect balance, softly silty, tangy, intense, mature and outstanding, occasionally a whiff of spirits but who cares

Dunn 1985 Cabernet Sauvignon, Howell Mountain - another sturdy straight-up cab but not as severe as the Mayacamas is tonight, reminds me more of St-Estephe; I think I like the strength of this just a bit better than the sophistication of the Sterling

Ch. La Dominique 1989 St Emilion - served from tin foil, everyone was saying Right Bank (as Jay has already posted), this was very red-fruity, a bit soft, pretty even though

Clos Saron 2004 Syrah "Heart of Stone" - stinging, artificially big, does not taste like syrah to me, "makes the Peter Michael look good" -Manuel

One sweet wine to end

Pierre Bise 1995 Coteaux du Layon Rochefort "Les Rayelles" - Brad relates stories of the good old days when this lovely sweetie was available for a song at Garnet; it is sweet but not overpoweringly so, but it is so fragrant!: a little lychee, a little rose, a little botrytis (maybe?), excellent

What a great bunch of wines. Thank you to all the diners for bringing a splendid and interesting mix.
 
Bottles, Brad, and iPhone
05_BottleBradIphone.jpg
Toro Albala
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Oh, Bradley! We take nice picture of you and you show us da fingah?
07_ManuelBrad.jpg
 
A fun night. I don't think I had been to Cafe Loup since around '05. I forgot how hot that place gets.

My WOTN was the Sterling. Beautiful wine that was refined and focused with terrific depth. I also really enjoyed the Bise, which was a recent auction acquisition, the La Dominque, The Rhys and the Clos Briords. When I tried the '09 Rhys Horseshoe Chard a year or so at Jay's, I said it may be the best CA Chard I've ever had. The 2010 is even better. Expansive, yet focused and bright with the oak nicely integrated.
 
The 1974 Sterling was a famous and much sought-after wine in its time. Ric Forman was still making the wine there at that time.
 
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
The 1974 Sterling was a famous and much sought-after wine in its time. Ric Forman was still making the wine there at that time.

Yep. That was discussed. I still have a bottle of the '73 that he made and it, too, is terrific.
 
originally posted by SFJoe:
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
The 1974 Sterling was a famous and much sought-after wine in its time.
The Zinfandel?

You in the right thread, Joe? This is the '74 Sterling Cab a few of us had on Thursday, not the '74 Simi Zin we had yesterday.
 
re the La Dominique - Everyone was not saying right bank. Brad said left and so did at least one other person (I don't remember who).

re the Toro Albala 1950 Amontillado - combined balanced intensity with fascinating complexity. Just wow.

The 1985 Dunn was another counterexample for the "Dunn never comes around" crowd. They can go have dinner with the "Gouges never comes around" people somewhere and leave their 25-30 year old examples for me to drink.
 
originally posted by Jay Miller:
re the La Dominique - Everyone was not saying right bank. Brad said left and so did at least one other person (I don't remember who).

re the Toro Albala 1950 Amontillado - combined balanced intensity with fascinating complexity. Just wow.

The 1985 Dunn was another counterexample for the "Dunn never comes around" crowd. They can go have dinner with the "Gouges never comes around" people somewhere and leave their 25-30 year old examples for me to drink.

Yeah, I thought it was an '85 St. Julien.

As for the Dunn, softer than what I've come to expect from Dunn, but it still needed a mouthful of steak to help with the tannins. This one was more fruit forward than most others I've had.
 
Back in Madrid after my extensive US trip (NY, Vegas, Miami)

Just wanted to thank you all, specially Brad for helping to organize for the great time in NY. Be sure to receive the same treatment if you ever come to Madrid

Best regards
 
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