An Apology from the Politburo

This must be part of the 50% of WD inside s*$t that goes over my head. I enjoyed the notes a great deal, and assumed the pictures were some kind of silly computer goof; they didn't bother me in the slightest. Don't take the notes away from us, Joe!
 
I'm touched that my notes are somehow important to a few of you...

Reading my notes must be like getting an elbow macaroni picture from a child with special needs. It doesn't really look like a horse but, bless their heart, they tried hard.

I would love to see some other folks repost notes. I can't really think about reposting mine right now; I'm still smarting from the photo of my wife being switched with the photo of a transvestite. Some day I will look back and laugh, I'm sure.

Best,
Joe
 
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
This must be part of the 50% of WD inside s*$t that goes over my head. I enjoyed the notes a great deal, and assumed the pictures were some kind of silly computer goof; they didn't bother me in the slightest. Don't take the notes away from us, Joe!

Dude, if you're up around fifty percent you're in rarefied Millerian territory. I'm still struggling to break the thirty-five percent barrier, and I've been here and on therapy since day one.
 
I should never admit what I am really thinking.

But that picture of Amy in the hot tub always gave me a little palpitation and I hope someone reposts it. She does not look very much like a transvestite. Hmm, at the Metropolitan Opera a couple of months ago I was standing in the line for the ladies room talking with Louise. I was just there for the conversation but the ladies behind me found it amusing, saying "are you sure you are in the right place?" I replied "=I= am a transvestite." "And a very successful one!." she replied. I suppose I took that as a compliment.

The other palpitation I had recently was when Sharon was talking about how everything in her cellar was "stacked." I am just a sick-o but at least I know it.

F
 
This drama is quite nearly as tasty as deep-fried bacon. Let's face it, mature, rational discussion has limited entertainment value. Can't we burn some witches in the process?
 
Just rereading it later tonight, that's a very reassuring post. I was kind of nervous there for awhile, nice to see a good recovery from our commie overlords. In a spirit of solidarity, I too will do my tiny part to make this forum the least profitable and most lightly read wine board on the internet!
 
I'm still smarting from the photo of my wife being switched with the photo of a transvestite

It's true that there isn't much resemblance. Now, if you'd posted a picture of Coad...
 
I would love to see some other folks repost notes.

OK.

I wandered around the labyrinth streets of Astor Place, looking for 5th Street. My handy little laminated map of Manhattan said it was nearby, and I figured that I could see the park from 5th. Yet my mind was cloudedby one of the most ridiculously-designed *$ franchises I'd ever seen, and the bad vibes emanating from somewhere above. A form of spider-sense, maybe. But I could smell record executives, and it made me nervous. Anyway, several wrong turns later I found 5th, and headed for the park.

Washington Square Park, that is. The time was 6 p.m. I was early.

A kind gentleman in a stocking cap inquired as to my market position on pharmaceutical commodities. I politely declined. He persisted. Looking to my right, I saw an occupied police cruiser. Turning the tables, I inquired as to the legitimacy of the gentleman's purported venture. He shrugged. "Oh dear," I fretted. "I hope I haven't caused him to lose face with his chums." Anyway, I was fifteen minutes less late than I had been, and there was the matter of the name-changing street to deal with.


As a Boston resident, I should have been prepared for this. In Boston, the names of streets change all the time. One block is Summer St., the next Winter St. (never mind that Winter is one-way, and Summer is one-way the opposite direction, and closed to traffic). Etc. Nevertheless, the sinister way in which MacDougal changed to NorWestBellAtlanticMobile Avenue as it bordered the park added to my unease. But undaunted and still unlate, I ventured forth.

Thinking that a door numbered 131 followed by a door numbered 133 meant I was headed in the wrong direction, I turned around. Of course, the numbers on the resumption of MacDougal were in the 150s. Clearly, I was hallucinating. This was, I discovered later, to be a major theme of the offline scheduled at NYC's Minetta Tavern, at 7 p.m.; a scant 30 minutes from the time I reversed direction. Time was running out.

Accustomed to being late for such events, however, I took the time to wander around the Village. I passed up numerous opportunities to have various parts of my body aerated, and instead knelt down in obeisance at the temple of American jazz, the Blue Note. But, the clock continued to tick, and it was now time. I turned the corner, and there it wasgleaming in psychedelic black and off-black: Minetta Tavern. I noticed a disheveled local insisting that the valet treat his tricycle with care.

Upon entering, I was struck by how the overhead lights seemed to swing to and fro, a remarkable achievement considering how they were encased within the ceiling itself. Ravi Shankar accelerated the pace of his raga. A tuxedo-suited host wearing tiny round sunglasses accepted my suit jacket, and offered me beads and a daisy. He then showed me to the back, through a jasmine-scented hall of Indian saris acting as curtains, and lit from above by pulsating purple lights.

Disappointingly, the room in which we emerged was completely empty, except for some floating teeth. As I stared, a face coalesced around the teeth, and then a body. I chuckled with relief; this wasn't Wonderland, it was just Chris Coad, resplendent in a nehru jacket and a sarong. He hadn't noticed me, engrossed as he was in an out-of-body experience triggered by memorizing a list of 1951's New York Times bestseller list. Chris' upcoming appearance on the famous TV game show Press Your Luck had him in full cram mode, and I had thus far politely ignored the practiced shouts of "No Whammies! STOP!!" he engaged in at home.

I sat, then stood, then sat again. I inquired as to the whereabouts of the restroom, and was informed to look for it in the spare room. But the only door I found there was the one affixed to a rather large clothes closetwhich, figuring I had nothing to lose, I opened. The distant sound of a flushing toilet convinced me, and I stepped into the wardrobe closet, pushed past some rather musty coats, and found myself in a sort of wintry outdoor lavatory. A street lamp glowed above me. I shrugged, and proceeded to go about my businessundisturbed, except for a brief interruption by a goat-headed, human-bodied creature trudging sullenly through the snow and muttering about enzymes.

When I returned, a man with a period (something you don't see every day) had joined Chris, who was now memorizing the military hierarchy of the Huns. What immediately struck me about Period Man was not his vivid red beard, but the two enormous phalluses he bore. "How odd," I thought. However, it turned out that his giant priapic appendages were actually magnums. Relief washed over with me, for who could compete with such largesse?

Others filtered in (except Domaine d'Andezon, which remained unfiltered and as a result had to be thrown out). Bob Ross entered, complaining that some idiot with a tricycle had scratched his Bentley. The man they call "Irrepressible," bearing a case of Bourgueil and Beaujolais. NJJoe, still day-trading on the British Colombian market. And others. It soon became clear that the New York WLDGers had two things in common: nothing, and wives far more vivacious than they really deserved (some of the wives even had class). The latter was something with which I could relate, and so I sat, satisfied that all was proceeding normally. I couldn't have been more wrong.

The arrival of the other two traveling guests, Rob Adler (resplendent with San Francisco jokes aplenty, along with several packages he claimed were "from the real Haight") and Mike Dashe (who seemed confused at the number of people at the table named Peter Finklestein, Peter Steinfesser, and Peter Picklepepper, but as an easygoing California-type affably chose to ignore it), meant that a start could be made. And so, in similar fashion to Boston offlines (where the whites are completed before menus are issued), we began.

Phallus number one (and more than enough phallus for anyone, though the myth that "bigger is always better" remains somewhat of a phallusy) was the 1989 Trimbach Riesling Cuve Frdric mile (in magnum). Closed at first, but opening nicely by 7 p.m. the following Thursday, this was pretty classic Fred (said the guy with the red head). Salty, almost impenetrable limestone, thick minerals, then softening with time. The tight finish remained constant, though; so unyielding was this wine that it was almost Hune-like. Irrepressible asked what fruit he was tasting, which catalyzed a vibrant conversation about the difference between rocks and plums, and the wonder of people who actually chew on rocks.

A 1995 Mann Gewurztraminer Steingrubler was also cast in the same austere mold, with typical lychee and spiced apple flavors giving way to an extremely dry chalkiness on the finish. Minerals abounded, though Irrepressible was loathe to mention them again. This was followed by a true rarity, the 1955 Dornfesser Chasselas Neiderschwihrler "Cuve Bon Choucroute", which proves the ridiculousness of the old adage "chasselas doesn't age 45 years, you nincompoop!" Triumphant and even a bit youthfully woolly, this was a wine for the ages, though there seemed to be vanishingly little of it.

"If you don't like this, then you don't like German riesling," opined the periodic one. Who was I to argue? AP# 2 583 154 08 99 was redolent of spring blossoms and lime, turning to green apple and violets as the mild sweetness slipped about the tongue. Minerals, yes, and drying acidity that was perhaps a bit bitter at this point. Needs time.

Noted wine importer and porn star Melissa Dressenger then started touting the merits of his newest acquisition, and his first California property. He insisted on some sort of lengthy preface about "irrigational dry-humping" or "I thought this was Rat's Leap" or something, but soon realized no one was listening, and simply passed the wine. And what a wine: 1998 Frog's Leap Sauvignon Blanc Napa is perhaps the most splendid jewel in the Louis/Massengil portfolio. "Like Newark during a thaw," I wrote in my notes, "but thank God there's plenty of acidity." Growing agitated at the growing enthusiasm for his new property, he quickly gathered the remnants of the wine and guzzled it straight from the bottle.

There was much dismay at this display of bad manners (though Irrepressible wants to have a future offline based around that theme: the NYC Chug'n'Glug Airborne Animals Offline), and so we moved on to a much less Jerseyesque wine: 1998 Hubert Laferrere Mcon-Chardonnay. I didn't know what kind of grape "Mcon" was, but bookworm Chris Coad explained that it's actually a region in France. "Well," I thought, "how silly. Who would actually name a chardonnay after a region? Why, next you'll be telling me that there's no fermented emperor in Corton-Charlemagne. How can you expect to get 96 points from noted chardonnay expert James Laube if you insist on devaluing the legendary 'chardonnay' name?" Nevertheless, this was an interesting wine. Mineral, shy at first, some botrytisy sticky pear and peach flavors, but with an odd finish of canned peas. Lacking someone to properly explain the wine to us, we turned to Drizzler, who at this point was speaking entirely in abbreviations. "AXR1, UCD1, B-52, OU812, M.A.S.H." he replied. Well, OK, but I'm not sure I agree.

TXJoe produced a wine he'd just picked up at the corner packie, 1998 Fritz Hirtzbirger Singerriedel-Riesling Smaragd. Why New Yorkers insist on such dreck when Gallo and KJ are more than willing to supply them with excellent supermarket brands, I can't imagine. Begrudgingly, I tasted the wine: fat banana nose (incidentally, one of my favorite bands from the sixties), grapefruit and bracing acidity, raw peanuts and exceedingly long. And some botrytis, maybe, perhaps? Anyway, killer juice, made better by the extreme distaste shown for it by Irrepressible, surely a key indicator of Austrian greatness if there ever was one. We voted this the "R" wine of the night, though noting that while this was truly an 8-"R" wine, Michael Pronay could undoubtedly come up with the all-time "R" champion while making his next spelling-correction pass through the WLDG. Also, who knew that old Georg was so loved in his own country that they named a grape after him?

At this point (or one very near iteverything is hazy in retrospect) the menus arrived. Printed with ultraviolet ink on black velvet backgrounds, too. We all switched on our "black lights" to select the veal chop of our choice. Ravi's frenetic thumping and wailing was replaced by a strange music that could only be described as a jam session between Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan and the Chocolate Watch Band, with Carmine Appice on cowbell. As the mirrorball descended and twinkling multicolored lights interfered with our menu-studying (Chris was too engrossed in 1996 Standard Oil Production Figures to pay much attention, mumbling that he'd just have "whatever veal chop sounds good"), a sweet haze filled the room.

We were suddenly and inexplicably ravenously hungry, and requested that the restaurant simply line up the veal calves at our table. And bring extra forks, please. Yet it seemed no amount of young pre-beef could sate our appetites. So we returned to the wine.

1971 Huet Vouvray "Le Haut Lieu" Demi-Sec would have won the Thunderbird Prize, if anyone could have borne to mention it and Thunderbird in the same sentence. A truly spectacular wine (of the rare demi-sec variety, which - we have been assured by wine importers with 355 years in the business - is not actually made anywhere in the world, which makes this non-existent wine all the more special). "Awesome" I wrote in my Palm, blubbering Rovanically over the sheer love emanating from this beverage. Quinine, lotion, a perfect balance of sweetness and acidity, large-scaled but still youthfulthe Methuselah of wines, man, and a way cool and trippin' white. Dude.

They brought our beef early, though it appeared to be a wine. Strange, but a mellow California mood was settling over us, and we set to with knife and fork. After some spillage, we found the technique, and were able to consume most of the 1998 Puzelat "Clos du Tue-Buf" Cheverny "La Callire". Gritty, strawberry and raspberry, dirty cranberriesman, this beef is a bummer. The dirt softens in the mouth, with some musty tobacco flavors, and a vegetarian finish. Or maybe it's just corked. Bad spot, man, to be after the wowzer Huet.

And hey dude, here's a straggler: 1989 Mittnacht-Klack Riesling Muhlforst "Selction des Grains Nobles". Low residual sugar (though man, we could really use some sugar right nowlike, you got any, man?), with more mustiness. Man, I hate it when Mom doesn't clean this attic. It's like buzzkiller moldy up here. But hey, peace. Anyway, closed nose, lightly sweet, pear and apple, a bit flowery. Light, and apparently not for the long haul. Speaking of which, who's got the U-Haul, man? My VW Bus is like wasted, and I want to spread some love on my way up to Canada, yknow?

The mood at the table started to shift upon the arrival of three things: food, the 1997 Brown Zinfandel Napa, and a herd of dancing pink BLINK tags. The haze was clearing, and the sugar we had been clamoring for a few minutes (or was it hours?) ago suddenly appeared in handy tablet form. Well, all right! And maybe it was that delicious sugar that ruined the taste of the wine, which was black peppery and lightly spicy, brambly and almost OK, but possessed of a really nasty residual sugar that made it taste like that nasty black cherry soda pop you get at Wal-Mart. Gasping for a better zinany better zinwe seized on the nearest Ridge bottle, hoping to sate our frenzy. Unfortunately, it wasnt zin at all. Instead, we were faced with the 1996 Ridge Syrah Lytton Estate, which was like heavily-peppered meat grilled over flowers, but with much vanillin oakiness on the finish. Tasty black cherries are hanging out (like K*Mart black cherry soda pop, I guess), and maybe this will come around in a few years.

I noticed something a little odd with my soup, which appeared to be bubbling. Borne on each of the little bubbles was a small Disney character singing the song he/she/it was associated with. I looked up to express my surprise to Mike Dashe, but he had started flashing. No, I dont mean he was taking off his clothes (though Oleg would do that, later), but he was actually blinking in and out of existence. A small gnat flew by in slow-motion, and I counted 35,892 beats of its wings while Matt Lewis/Drudgener opined about clonal selection in Greenland. But my attention was diverted as his flapping tongue detached itself from his body, drifted downward towards a pair of wines, and attached itself to the labels. And thus, the wines became: 1997 Ducellier "Le Chemins de Bassac" Vin de Pays Ctes de Thongue "Cap de lHomme" (blueberry, licorice, thin and short, uninteresting) and 1997 Ducellier "Le Chemins de Bassac" Vin de Pays Ctes de Thongue "Pierre Elie" (meaty, weightier, big and nutty, most definitely worthy of further study).

Somewhat unnerved at the loss of his tongue, which made it hard to continue his lecture on pit management in Bugey, Dressnelstein pulled his chair back from the table and attempted to conduct his own offline. For a time, chaos reigned, and the pile of bottles in Jossners Confederacy of Tongueless Minetta Winos quickly grew to unmanageable numbers (the gnat helped me countthere were well over 350 bottles), while Robs attempt to regain control of the proceedings by reciting hundreds of limericks failed.

But Joxers breakaway republic came to an abrupt and violent end when Montgomery Scott swooped the shuttlecraft Risa through the room (narrowly missing the mirrorball), snagged Louis LXII/Dressner MCMLXVI in a tractor beam, and recalibrated the boson field modulator while boosting the containment field. The maneuver was successful, but it had the unintended effect of shrinking all the bottles on the table by 50%. While Engineers Scott and LaForge attempted to redirect the tetrion emissions and restore our vinous bounty to its rightful size, we enjoyed a 1997 Viader Cabernet Sauvignon/Franc Napa (half-bottle).

OK, maybe "enjoyed" is misleading. This is a dessert wine, meaning that it actually tastes like dessert. Buttered chocolate, and more chocolate, but no fruit anywhere. Best enjoyed while sitting in an oak chair at an oak desk, in the middle of an oak forest, saying "OK" to Okies in Oklahoma while reading a biography of Annie Oakley and her Okinawan tour.

The Treknobabble ended just as all the oxygen and hydrogen in the air separated with a loud poof, drenching those of us not prepared with our finely-knit samurai armor. While others dried themselves off with towels fresh of the Neptune shuttle, we tried to recover from the woody assault of the Viader with a full-size bottle of 1997 Domaine des Penses Sauvages Corbires. Alas, it was not to be. Big and chewy, full of black and bell peppers, rustic and nice, but the victim of a mild corkiness. That this wine was still enjoyable despite the Curse of the Yaniger (a legend Rob promised to tell us as soon as he finished assembling his four-dimensional head) surely means something, though Im not sure what.

Main courses then arrived: a long procession of white-gloved (and two-headed) waiters bearing an infinite number of veal chops on platters made of some sort of superconductive plasma. Or maybe those were the sides. Thickly-accented babble filled the air, though discriminating between that of the waiters and that of wine importers and fun guys Abe & Louis Dooley was somewhat difficult. Thankfully, the hallucinatory atmosphere began to submit to reality. Noses returned to their proper faces, the camels stopped their poker game, and Andrew forgot the rest of the words to "Stairway to Heaven." The was a brief silence, and then a persistent yet annoying sniffing and snuffling started around the room. Bob Ross developed a sudden urge to return to his BMW and fondle the car phone. WVJoe called his broker. The TV in the corner came to life, and pictured Michael Douglas (with well-greased hair) lecturing Charlie Sheen about something. A fat, bloated man in a white tux with the word "disco" emblazoned on his chest staggered into the room, gasped his last breath, and died. We shrugged, suddenly nervous about the rapid passage of time and our own portfolios, and ordered up some more wine. Punctuation Man whipped out the second of his phalli. Hey, careful with that thing!

1964 Beychevelle Saint-Julien (magnum). Hey, is it hot in here? Why is everyone sweating? I feel the need to take off my skinny tie. This is, despite some pre-tasting negativity from The One Who Ends His Sentence At The Beginning, is absolutely delicious. Fairly big, still, with graphite and some fennel sausage on the nose. OK, this is enticing, but perhaps it is very slightly chunky after all. More graphite on the palate, fruitiness, tobaccoa very nice wine, and given that this bottle apparently saw mediocre storage, theres no hurry for those of you with giant priapuses. Uh, I mean magnums.

All of this talk of phalli made the men in the room realize that they were suddenly unable to perform. Literally, they could not get their forks from the plate to their mouths. More sniffling, and Chris developed an uncontrollable nasal itching. Irrepressible actually started to bleed. Quick, more wine!

The 1988 Vietti Barolo Brunate rode to the rescue on a giant horse (look at the nose on that thing! If only), with classic tar and rose characteristics bridled with ash and some gritty tannin. Long, long finish. A star in the making, but perhaps a little difficult tonight. As were the next two wines, finally released from bondage by the now steady-state Mike Dashe. Claiming bottle shock would affect the two newly-bottled and shipped wines, he nevertheless passed his babies around the room, all the while nervously fingering the three spoons he had requested from the waitstaff. And it was true that the 1998 Dashe Zinfandel Dry Creek Valley was rather dense and thick, tasting mostly of blueberry and oak. But its big brother, the 1998 Dashe Zinfandel "Todd Brother Ranch" Alexander Valley, was brawny enough to push through its fresh-oak cocoon and emerge as an explosion of black fruit with some ageworthy tannin. Theres still plenty of oak there, but even one day later (at another tasting, if anyone could actually believe that there would be another tasting after this one) both wines were showing better.

Jen started to shake and quiver, and sprinted to the jukebox, dumping in a bag of quarters and selecting the entire Huey Lewis & the News discography. Thus fortified with the peppy melody of "I Want A New Drug," we proceeded to dance jerkily (and as far from each other as possible) around the room, on top of the table, and in the restroom (in which it seemed that the stalls were permanently occupied by people with bad colds). Despite loud protests from the corner (where he was once again trying to start his own offline) that Huey Lewis was his original business partner, we ignored Mr. Big Shot Wine Importer and moved on to complete my wine jerky mini-vertical with the 1996 Gourt de Mautens Ctes-du-Rhne-Villages Rasteau. Hmmmnot as tasty as the 97. It turns out that the wine was corked, but it was still more enjoyable than the 98.

As everyone seems to recover from their nasal congestion and is overcome with a baggy-eyed drowsiness, we attack the last red: 1982 Muga Rioja "Prado Enea Gran Reserva", which is little more than oak-smoked bacon burnt at the edges.

The ever flexible Minetta delivered our dessert cart, which seems oddly decorated with what used to be referred to in polite society as "marital aids." Puzzled, we select our sweeties for the evening, while the Huey Lewis marathon gives way to an odd juxtaposition of Princes "Darling Nikki" and trance music. Have we stumbled into a rave? Regardless, we have dessert wines to taste, and we lick our lips and giggle as we dive into the first.

1989 Huet Vouvray "Cuve Constance" is super-concentrated, with gobs of unctuous layers of hedonistic lip-smacking juice so good I poured the entire wine down my well-satisfied gullet and let out a loud burp worthy of the Order of Merit. Others, though, thought the wine to be highly concentrated but backed with strong acidity, honeyed, and possessing an exquisite finish. Personally, I didnt think those unimaginative sorts used enough adjectives.

I felt a hand stroking my back, but when I inquired as to its origin no one seemed to know what I was talking about. With Bob Ross on one side of me and the first half of the Periodic Table on the other, I couldnt imagine what might be happening. I noticed, though, that Rob and Ilene had disappeared. Pressing on, we uncorked a 1975 Oremus Tokaji Asz 5 Puttonyos, a wine that lacked only Michael Pronays instructive spelling lessons to achieve completeness. If corn could fall victim to botrytis, this is what it would taste like, though bracing acidity and a long, piercing nectarine flavor emerges from the maz of flavors. This wine completely dominated the one that followed, the 1994 Ostertag Gewurztraminer Fronholz "Vendange Tardive", which promised all sorts of fat smoky cashew, bacon, and peachy citrusness, but completely fell apart from the midpalate on. Perhaps it needed to spend another 15 years in barrique to achieve real Alsatian typicity, but tonight it was mostly just disappointing.

Rob and Ilene returned, sharing some private joke, but now Irrepressible and Josephine Druschetti had escaped to places unknown. Jen had affixed some sort of collar to Andrew. Even Chris and FLJoe were eyeing each other. Clearly, we needed more wine, though it was hard to hear that request over the throbbing yet mesmerizing erotic meanderings coming from the speakers. Just then, a wandering refugee who claimed he had escaped from some Burgundian bacchanal offered us his wine. Initially, we refused, thinking this straggler to be some sort of odd oenological bum, but we soon felt sympathy for his sad tale of woe. It seemed he had been dragging this bottle from tasting to tasting for the last 21 years, but had been caught in some sort of existentialist wine hell in which tastings always ended just before he could open his prized wine. And thus, we uncorked a 1979 Parc "Domaine du Mas Blanc" Banyuls "Cuve de la Saint Martin", full of bitter chocolate, thyme, raisin, and vanilla. In near-perfect balance slightly marred only by a brief encounter with a bit of alcoholic heat, this was a wine worth waiting for. Our visitor thanked us, and tried to leave, but he found No Exit.

As the heat in the room increased, and Andrew attempted to sip wine through the small hole in his leather mask, we noted the return of Irrepressible and Droolis Lessner. The former had donned a frilly lace thong and red leather boots, while the latter was resplendent in a lovely Versace dress open to the navel and Prada shoes. Perhaps there was even a little mascara in use, though we were too polite to comment. Instead, we opened what appeared to be the last wine, and an unfortunately unmendable victim of our earlier experiments with the space-time continuum. The 1997 Quinta do Noval Vintage Porto (half-bottle) was too young and simple to follow the Banyuls, though its thick and velvety structure was certainly enticing.

Fortified (sorry) for our journey home, we quickly escaped from the ever-weirder Minetta Tavern only to be knocked on our backs by the arrival of Ms. Lisa Allen, late but determined to consume her share of the vinous bounty. Much sidewalk merrymaking ensued as Lisa power-sniffed her way through the lineup, at which point she re-emerged to query us about the discarded underthings on Irrepressibles chair. We claimed ignorance, and stayed to watch Abe Vigoda shakily pedal off on his tricycle. Feeling satisfied at yet another successful outing, Chris, Lisa, Oleg, and myself boarded a taxi headed for the World Trade Center, pausing only to wonder at the struggling man being dragged from Minetta by federal DEA agents.

And thus, we came to a sad end. For our cabbie made the ill-advised choice to race the wrong way up a one-way street. As we perished in a fiery conflagration, we heard the lecturing voice of Nancy Reagan, reminding us once again to "Just Say No." If only we had paid more attention to those ABC After-School Specials
 
originally posted by Thor:
I would love to see some other folks repost notes.

OK.

I wandered around the labyrinth streets of Astor Place, looking for 5th Street. My handy little laminated map of Manhattan said it was nearby, and I figured that I could see the park from 5th. Yet my mind was cloudedby one of the most ridiculously-designed *$ franchises I'd ever seen, and the bad vibes emanating from somewhere above. A form of spider-sense, maybe. But I could smell record executives, and it made me nervous. Anyway, several wrong turns later I found 5th, and headed for the park.

Washington Square Park, that is. The time was 6pm. I was early.

A kind gentleman in a stocking cap inquired as to my market position on pharmaceutical commodities. I politely declined. He persisted. Looking to my right, I saw an occupied police cruiser. Turning the tables, I inquired as to the legitimacy of the gentleman's purported venture. He shrugged. "Oh dear," I fretted. "I hope I haven't caused him to lose face with his chums." Anyway, I was fifteen minutes less late than I had been, and there was the matter of the name-changing street to deal with.


As a Boston resident, I should have been prepared for this. In Boston, the names of streets change all the time. One block is Summer St., the next Winter St. (never mind that Winter is one-way, and Summer is one-way the opposite direction, and closed to traffic). Etc. Nevertheless, the sinister way in which MacDougal changed to NorWestBellAtlanticMobile Avenue as it bordered the park added to my unease. But undaunted and still unlate, I ventured forth.

Thinking that a door numbered 131 followed by a door numbered 133 meant I was headed in the wrong direction, I turned around. Of course, the numbers on the resumption of MacDougal were in the 150s. Clearly, I was hallucinating. This was, I discovered later, to be a major theme of the offline scheduled at NYC's Minetta Tavern, at 7 p.m.; a scant 30 minutes from the time I reversed direction. Time was running out.

Accustomed to being late for such events, however, I took the time to wander around the Village. I passed up numerous opportunities to have various parts of my body aerated, and instead knelt down in obeisance at the temple of American jazz, the Blue Note. But, the clock continued to tick, and it was now time. I turned the corner, and there it wasgleaming in psychedelic black and off-black: Minetta Tavern. I noticed a disheveled local insisting that the valet treat his tricycle with care.

Upon entering, I was struck by how the overhead lights seemed to swing to and fro, a remarkable achievement considering how they were encased within the ceiling itself. Ravi Shankar accelerated the pace of his raga. A tuxedo-suited host wearing tiny round sunglasses accepted my suit jacket, and offered me beads and a daisy. He then showed me to the back, through a jasmine-scented hall of Indian saris acting as curtains, and lit from above by pulsating purple lights.

Disappointingly, the room in which we emerged was completely empty, except for some floating teeth. As I stared, a face coalesced around the teeth, and then a body. I chuckled with relief; this wasn't Wonderland, it was just Chris Coad, resplendent in a nehru jacket and a sarong. He hadn't noticed me, engrossed as he was in an out-of-body experience triggered by memorizing a list of 1951's New York Times bestseller list. Chris' upcoming appearance on the famous TV game show Press Your Luck had him in full cram mode, and I had thus far politely ignored the practiced shouts of "No Whammies! STOP!!" he engaged in at home.

I sat, then stood, then sat again. I inquired as to the whereabouts of the restroom, and was informed to look for it in the spare room. But the only door I found there was the one affixed to a rather large clothes closetwhich, figuring I had nothing to lose, I opened. The distant sound of a flushing toilet convinced me, and I stepped into the wardrobe closet, pushed past some rather musty coats, and found myself in a sort of wintry outdoor lavatory. A street lamp glowed above me. I shrugged, and proceeded to go about my businessundisturbed, except for a brief interruption by a goat-headed, human-bodied creature trudging sullenly through the snow and muttering about enzymes.

When I returned, a man with a period (something you don't see every day) had joined Chris, who was now memorizing the military hierarchy of the Huns. What immediately struck me about Period Man was not his vivid red beard, but the two enormous phalluses he bore. "How odd," I thought. However, it turned out that his giant priapic appendages were actually magnums. Relief washed over with me, for who could compete with such largesse?

Others filtered in (except Domaine d'Andezon, which remained unfiltered and as a result had to be thrown out). Bob Ross entered, complaining that some idiot with a tricycle had scratched his Bentley. The man they call "Irrepressible," bearing a case of Bourgueil and Beaujolais. NJJoe, still day-trading on the British Colombian market. And others. It soon became clear that the New York WLDGers had two things in common: nothing, and wives far more vivacious than they really deserved (some of the wives even had class). The latter was something with which I could relate, and so I sat, satisfied that all was proceeding normally. I couldn't have been more wrong.

The arrival of the other two traveling guests, Rob Adler (resplendent with San Francisco jokes aplenty, along with several packages he claimed were "from the real Haight") and Mike Dashe (who seemed confused at the number of people at the table named Peter Finklestein, Peter Steinfesser, and Peter Picklepepper, but as an easygoing California-type affably chose to ignore it), meant that a start could be made. And so, in similar fashion to Boston offlines (where the whites are completed before menus are issued), we began.

Phallus number one (and more than enough phallus for anyone, though the myth that "bigger is always better" remains somewhat of a phallusy) was the 1989 Trimbach Riesling Cuve Frdric mile (in magnum). Closed at first, but opening nicely by 7pm the following Thursday, this was pretty classic Fred (said the guy with the red head). Salty, almost impenetrable limestone, thick minerals, then softening with time. The tight finish remained constant, though; so unyielding was this wine that it was almost Hune-like. Irrepressible asked what fruit he was tasting, which catalyzed a vibrant conversation about the difference between rocks and plums, and the wonder of people who actually chew on rocks.

A 1995 Mann Gewurztraminer Steingrubler was also cast in the same austere mold, with typical lychee and spiced apple flavors giving way to an extremely dry chalkiness on the finish. Minerals abounded, though Irrepressible was loathe to mention them again. This was followed by a true rarity, the 1955 Dornfesser Chasselas Neiderschwihrler "Cuve Bon Choucroute", which proves the ridiculousness of the old adage "chasselas doesn't age 45 years, you nincompoop!" Triumphant and even a bit youthfully woolly, this was a wine for the ages, though there seemed to be vanishingly little of it.

"If you don't like this, then you don't like German riesling," opined the periodic one. Who was I to argue? AP# 2 583 154 08 99 was redolent of spring blossoms and lime, turning to green apple and violets as the mild sweetness slipped about the tongue. Minerals, yes, and drying acidity that was perhaps a bit bitter at this point. Needs time.

Noted wine importer and porn star Melissa Dressenger then started touting the merits of his newest acquisition, and his first California property. He insisted on some sort of lengthy preface about "irrigational dry-humping" or "I thought this was Rat's Leap" or something, but soon realized no one was listening, and simply passed the wine. And what a wine: 1998 Frog's Leap Sauvignon Blanc Napa is perhaps the most splendid jewel in the Louis/Massengil portfolio. "Like Newark during a thaw," I wrote in my notes, "but thank God there's plenty of acidity." Growing agitated at the growing enthusiasm for his new property, he quickly gathered the remnants of the wine and guzzled it straight from the bottle.

There was much dismay at this display of bad manners (though Irrepressible wants to have a future offline based around that theme: the NYC Chug'n'Glug Airborne Animals Offline), and so we moved on to a much less Jerseyesque wine: 1998 Hubert Laferrere Mcon-Chardonnay. I didn't know what kind of grape "Mcon" was, but bookworm Chris Coad explained that it's actually a region in France. "Well," I thought, "how silly. Who would actually name a chardonnay after a region? Why, next you'll be telling me that there's no fermented emperor in Corton-Charlemagne. How can you expect to get 96 points from noted chardonnay expert James Laube if you insist on devaluing the legendary 'chardonnay' name?" Nevertheless, this was an interesting wine. Mineral, shy at first, some botrytisy sticky pear and peach flavors, but with an odd finish of canned peas. Lacking someone to properly explain the wine to us, we turned to Drizzler, who at this point was speaking entirely in abbreviations. "AXR1, UCD1, B-52, OU812, M.A.S.H." he replied. Well, OK, but I'm not sure I agree.

TXJoe produced a wine he'd just picked up at the corner packie, 1998 Fritz Hirtzbirger Singerriedel-Riesling Smaragd. Why New Yorkers insist on such dreck when Gallo and KJ are more than willing to supply them with excellent supermarket brands, I can't imagine. Begrudgingly, I tasted the wine: fat banana nose (incidentally, one of my favorite bands from the sixties), grapefruit and bracing acidity, raw peanuts and exceedingly long. And some botrytis, maybe, perhaps? Anyway, killer juice, made better by the extreme distaste shown for it by Irrepressible, surely a key indicator of Austrian greatness if there ever was one. We voted this the "R" wine of the night, though noting that while this was truly an 8-"R" wine, Michael Pronay could undoubtedly come up with the all-time "R" champion while making his next spelling-correction pass through the WLDG. Also, who knew that old Georg was so loved in his own country that they named a grape after him?

At this point (or one very near iteverything is hazy in retrospect) the menus arrived. Printed with ultraviolet ink on black velvet backgrounds, too. We all switched on our "black lights" to select the veal chop of our choice. Ravi's frenetic thumping and wailing was replaced by a strange music that could only be described as a jam session between Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan and the Chocolate Watch Band, with Carmine Appice on cowbell. As the mirrorball descended and twinkling multicolored lights interfered with our menu-studying (Chris was too engrossed in 1996 Standard Oil Production Figures to pay much attention, mumbling that he'd just have "whatever veal chop sounds good"), a sweet haze filled the room.

We were suddenly and inexplicably ravenously hungry, and requested that the restaurant simply line up the veal calves at our table. And bring extra forks, please. Yet it seemed no amount of young pre-beef could sate our appetites. So we returned to the wine.

1971 Huet Vouvray "Le Haut Lieu" Demi-Sec would have won the Thunderbird Prize, if anyone could have borne to mention it and Thunderbird in the same sentence. A truly spectacular wine (of the rare demi-sec variety, which - we have been assured by wine importers with 355 years in the business - is not actually made anywhere in the world, which makes this non-existent wine all the more special). "Awesome" I wrote in my Palm, blubbering Rovanically over the sheer love emanating from this beverage. Quinine, lotion, a perfect balance of sweetness and acidity, large-scaled but still youthfulthe Methuselah of wines, man, and a way cool and trippin' white. Dude.

They brought our beef early, though it appeared to be a wine. Strange, but a mellow California mood was settling over us, and we set to with knife and fork. After some spillage, we found the technique, and were able to consume most of the 1998 Puzelat "Clos du Tue-Buf" Cheverny "La Callire". Gritty, strawberry and raspberry, dirty cranberriesman, this beef is a bummer. The dirt softens in the mouth, with some musty tobacco flavors, and a vegetarian finish. Or maybe it's just corked. Bad spot, man, to be after the wowzer Huet.

And hey dude, here's a straggler: 1989 Mittnacht-Klack Riesling Muhlforst "Selction des Grains Nobles". Low residual sugar (though man, we could really use some sugar right nowlike, you got any, man?), with more mustiness. Man, I hate it when Mom doesn't clean this attic. It's like buzzkiller moldy up here. But hey, peace. Anyway, closed nose, lightly sweet, pear and apple, a bit flowery. Light, and apparently not for the long haul. Speaking of which, who's got the U-Haul, man? My VW Bus is like wasted, and I want to spread some love on my way up to Canada, yknow?

The mood at the table started to shift upon the arrival of three things: food, the 1997 Brown Zinfandel Napa, and a herd of dancing pink BLINK tags. The haze was clearing, and the sugar we had been clamoring for a few minutes (or was it hours?) ago suddenly appeared in handy tablet form. Well, all right! And maybe it was that delicious sugar that ruined the taste of the wine, which was black peppery and lightly spicy, brambly and almost OK, but possessed of a really nasty residual sugar that made it taste like that nasty black cherry soda pop you get at Wal-Mart. Gasping for a better zinany better zinwe seized on the nearest Ridge bottle, hoping to sate our frenzy. Unfortunately, it wasnt zin at all. Instead, we were faced with the 1996 Ridge Syrah Lytton Estate, which was like heavily-peppered meat grilled over flowers, but with much vanillin oakiness on the finish. Tasty black cherries are hanging out (like K*Mart black cherry soda pop, I guess), and maybe this will come around in a few years.

I noticed something a little odd with my soup, which appeared to be bubbling. Borne on each of the little bubbles was a small Disney character singing the song he/she/it was associated with. I looked up to express my surprise to Mike Dashe, but he had started flashing. No, I dont mean he was taking off his clothes (though Oleg would do that, later), but he was actually blinking in and out of existence. A small gnat flew by in slow-motion, and I counted 35,892 beats of its wings while Matt Lewis/Drudgener opined about clonal selection in Greenland. But my attention was diverted as his flapping tongue detached itself from his body, drifted downward towards a pair of wines, and attached itself to the labels. And thus, the wines became: 1997 Ducellier "Le Chemins de Bassac" Vin de Pays Ctes de Thongue "Cap de lHomme" (blueberry, licorice, thin and short, uninteresting) and 1997 Ducellier "Le Chemins de Bassac" Vin de Pays Ctes de Thongue "Pierre Elie" (meaty, weightier, big and nutty, most definitely worthy of further study).

Somewhat unnerved at the loss of his tongue, which made it hard to continue his lecture on pit management in Bugey, Dressnelstein pulled his chair back from the table and attempted to conduct his own offline. For a time, chaos reigned, and the pile of bottles in Jossners Confederacy of Tongueless Minetta Winos quickly grew to unmanageable numbers (the gnat helped me countthere were well over 350 bottles), while Robs attempt to regain control of the proceedings by reciting hundreds of limericks failed.

But Joxers breakaway republic came to an abrupt and violent end when Montgomery Scott swooped the shuttlecraft Risa through the room (narrowly missing the mirrorball), snagged Louis LXII/Dressner MCMLXVI in a tractor beam, and recalibrated the boson field modulator while boosting the containment field. The maneuver was successful, but it had the unintended effect of shrinking all the bottles on the table by 50%. While Engineers Scott and LaForge attempted to redirect the tetrion emissions and restore our vinous bounty to its rightful size, we enjoyed a 1997 Viader Cabernet Sauvignon/Franc Napa (half-bottle).

OK, maybe "enjoyed" is misleading. This is a dessert wine, meaning that it actually tastes like dessert. Buttered chocolate, and more chocolate, but no fruit anywhere. Best enjoyed while sitting in an oak chair at an oak desk, in the middle of an oak forest, saying "OK" to Okies in Oklahoma while reading a biography of Annie Oakley and her Okinawan tour.

The Treknobabble ended just as all the oxygen and hydrogen in the air separated with a loud poof, drenching those of us not prepared with our finely-knit samurai armor. While others dried themselves off with towels fresh of the Neptune shuttle, we tried to recover from the woody assault of the Viader with a full-size bottle of 1997 Domaine des Penses Sauvages Corbires. Alas, it was not to be. Big and chewy, full of black and bell peppers, rustic and nice, but the victim of a mild corkiness. That this wine was still enjoyable despite the Curse of the Yaniger (a legend Rob promised to tell us as soon as he finished assembling his four-dimensional head) surely means something, though Im not sure what.

Main courses then arrived: a long procession of white-gloved (and two-headed) waiters bearing an infinite number of veal chops on platters made of some sort of superconductive plasma. Or maybe those were the sides. Thickly-accented babble filled the air, though discriminating between that of the waiters and that of wine importers and fun guys Abe & Louis Dooley was somewhat difficult. Thankfully, the hallucinatory atmosphere began to submit to reality. Noses returned to their proper faces, the camels stopped their poker game, and Andrew forgot the rest of the words to "Stairway to Heaven." The was a brief silence, and then a persistent yet annoying sniffing and snuffling started around the room. Bob Ross developed a sudden urge to return to his BMW and fondle the car phone. WVJoe called his broker. The TV in the corner came to life, and pictured Michael Douglas (with well-greased hair) lecturing Charlie Sheen about something. A fat, bloated man in a white tux with the word "disco" emblazoned on his chest staggered into the room, gasped his last breath, and died. We shrugged, suddenly nervous about the rapid passage of time and our own portfolios, and ordered up some more wine. Punctuation Man whipped out the second of his phalli. Hey, careful with that thing!

1964 Beychevelle Saint-Julien (magnum). Hey, is it hot in here? Why is everyone sweating? I feel the need to take off my skinny tie. This is, despite some pre-tasting negativity from The One Who Ends His Sentence At The Beginning, is absolutely delicious. Fairly big, still, with graphite and some fennel sausage on the nose. OK, this is enticing, but perhaps it is very slightly chunky after all. More graphite on the palate, fruitiness, tobaccoa very nice wine, and given that this bottle apparently saw mediocre storage, theres no hurry for those of you with giant priapuses. Uh, I mean magnums.

All of this talk of phalli made the men in the room realize that they were suddenly unable to perform. Literally, they could not get their forks from the plate to their mouths. More sniffling, and Chris developed an uncontrollable nasal itching. Irrepressible actually started to bleed. Quick, more wine!

The 1988 Vietti Barolo Brunate rode to the rescue on a giant horse (look at the nose on that thing! If only), with classic tar and rose characteristics bridled with ash and some gritty tannin. Long, long finish. A star in the making, but perhaps a little difficult tonight. As were the next two wines, finally released from bondage by the now steady-state Mike Dashe. Claiming bottle shock would affect the two newly-bottled and shipped wines, he nevertheless passed his babies around the room, all the while nervously fingering the three spoons he had requested from the waitstaff. And it was true that the 1998 Dashe Zinfandel Dry Creek Valley was rather dense and thick, tasting mostly of blueberry and oak. But its big brother, the 1998 Dashe Zinfandel "Todd Brother Ranch" Alexander Valley, was brawny enough to push through its fresh-oak cocoon and emerge as an explosion of black fruit with some ageworthy tannin. Theres still plenty of oak there, but even one day later (at another tasting, if anyone could actually believe that there would be another tasting after this one) both wines were showing better.

Jen started to shake and quiver, and sprinted to the jukebox, dumping in a bag of quarters and selecting the entire Huey Lewis & the News discography. Thus fortified with the peppy melody of "I Want A New Drug," we proceeded to dance jerkily (and as far from each other as possible) around the room, on top of the table, and in the restroom (in which it seemed that the stalls were permanently occupied by people with bad colds). Despite loud protests from the corner (where he was once again trying to start his own offline) that Huey Lewis was his original business partner, we ignored Mr. Big Shot Wine Importer and moved on to complete my wine jerky mini-vertical with the 1996 Gourt de Mautens Ctes-du-Rhne-Villages Rasteau. Hmmmnot as tasty as the 97. It turns out that the wine was corked, but it was still more enjoyable than the 98.

As everyone seems to recover from their nasal congestion and is overcome with a baggy-eyed drowsiness, we attack the last red: 1982 Muga Rioja "Prado Enea Gran Reserva", which is little more than oak-smoked bacon burnt at the edges.

The ever flexible Minetta delivered our dessert cart, which seems oddly decorated with what used to be referred to in polite society as "marital aids." Puzzled, we select our sweeties for the evening, while the Huey Lewis marathon gives way to an odd juxtaposition of Princes "Darling Nikki" and trance music. Have we stumbled into a rave? Regardless, we have dessert wines to taste, and we lick our lips and giggle as we dive into the first.

1989 Huet Vouvray "Cuve Constance" is super-concentrated, with gobs of unctuous layers of hedonistic lip-smacking juice so good I poured the entire wine down my well-satisfied gullet and let out a loud burp worthy of the Order of Merit. Others, though, thought the wine to be highly concentrated but backed with strong acidity, honeyed, and possessing an exquisite finish. Personally, I didnt think those unimaginative sorts used enough adjectives.

I felt a hand stroking my back, but when I inquired as to its origin no one seemed to know what I was talking about. With Bob Ross on one side of me and the first half of the Periodic Table on the other, I couldnt imagine what might be happening. I noticed, though, that Rob and Ilene had disappeared. Pressing on, we uncorked a 1975 Oremus Tokaji Asz 5 Puttonyos, a wine that lacked only Michael Pronays instructive spelling lessons to achieve completeness. If corn could fall victim to botrytis, this is what it would taste like, though bracing acidity and a long, piercing nectarine flavor emerges from the maz of flavors. This wine completely dominated the one that followed, the 1994 Ostertag Gewurztraminer Fronholz "Vendange Tardive", which promised all sorts of fat smoky cashew, bacon, and peachy citrusness, but completely fell apart from the midpalate on. Perhaps it needed to spend another 15 years in barrique to achieve real Alsatian typicity, but tonight it was mostly just disappointing.

Rob and Ilene returned, sharing some private joke, but now Irrepressible and Josephine Druschetti had escaped to places unknown. Jen had affixed some sort of collar to Andrew. Even Chris and FLJoe were eyeing each other. Clearly, we needed more wine, though it was hard to hear that request over the throbbing yet mesmerizing erotic meanderings coming from the speakers. Just then, a wandering refugee who claimed he had escaped from some Burgundian bacchanal offered us his wine. Initially, we refused, thinking this straggler to be some sort of odd oenological bum, but we soon felt sympathy for his sad tale of woe. It seemed he had been dragging this bottle from tasting to tasting for the last 21 years, but had been caught in some sort of existentialist wine hell in which tastings always ended just before he could open his prized wine. And thus, we uncorked a 1979 Parc "Domaine du Mas Blanc" Banyuls "Cuve de la Saint Martin", full of bitter chocolate, thyme, raisin, and vanilla. In near-perfect balance slightly marred only by a brief encounter with a bit of alcoholic heat, this was a wine worth waiting for. Our visitor thanked us, and tried to leave, but he found No Exit.

As the heat in the room increased, and Andrew attempted to sip wine through the small hole in his leather mask, we noted the return of Irrepressible and Droolis Lessner. The former had donned a frilly lace thong and red leather boots, while the latter was resplendent in a lovely Versace dress open to the navel and Prada shoes. Perhaps there was even a little mascara in use, though we were too polite to comment. Instead, we opened what appeared to be the last wine, and an unfortunately unmendable victim of our earlier experiments with the space-time continuum. The 1997 Quinta do Noval Vintage Porto (half-bottle) was too young and simple to follow the Banyuls, though its thick and velvety structure was certainly enticing.

Fortified (sorry) for our journey home, we quickly escaped from the ever-weirder Minetta Tavern only to be knocked on our backs by the arrival of Ms. Lisa Allen, late but determined to consume her share of the vinous bounty. Much sidewalk merrymaking ensued as Lisa power-sniffed her way through the lineup, at which point she re-emerged to query us about the discarded underthings on Irrepressibles chair. We claimed ignorance, and stayed to watch Abe Vigoda shakily pedal off on his tricycle. Feeling satisfied at yet another successful outing, Chris, Lisa, Oleg, and myself boarded a taxi headed for the World Trade Center, pausing only to wonder at the struggling man being dragged from Minetta by federal DEA agents.

And thus, we came to a sad end. For our cabbie made the ill-advised choice to race the wrong way up a one-way street. As we perished in a fiery conflagration, we heard the lecturing voice of Nancy Reagan, reminding us once again to "Just Say No." If only we had paid more attention to those ABC After-School Specials

Whoa. Good times, good times.
 
originally posted by Thor:
I would love to see some other folks repost notes.

OK.

I wandered around the labyrinth streets of Astor Place, looking for 5th Street. My handy little laminated map of Manhattan said it was nearby, and I figured that I could see the park from 5th. Yet my mind was cloudedby one of the most ridiculously-designed *$ franchises I'd ever seen, and the bad vibes emanating from somewhere above. A form of spider-sense, maybe. But I could smell record executives, and it made me nervous. Anyway, several wrong turns later I found 5th, and headed for the park.

Washington Square Park, that is. The time was 6 p.m. I was early.

A kind gentleman in a stocking cap inquired as to my market position on pharmaceutical commodities. I politely declined. He persisted. Looking to my right, I saw an occupied police cruiser. Turning the tables, I inquired as to the legitimacy of the gentleman's purported venture. He shrugged. "Oh dear," I fretted. "I hope I haven't caused him to lose face with his chums." Anyway, I was fifteen minutes less late than I had been, and there was the matter of the name-changing street to deal with.


As a Boston resident, I should have been prepared for this. In Boston, the names of streets change all the time. One block is Summer St., the next Winter St. (never mind that Winter is one-way, and Summer is one-way the opposite direction, and closed to traffic). Etc. Nevertheless, the sinister way in which MacDougal changed to NorWestBellAtlanticMobile Avenue as it bordered the park added to my unease. But undaunted and still unlate, I ventured forth.

Thinking that a door numbered 131 followed by a door numbered 133 meant I was headed in the wrong direction, I turned around. Of course, the numbers on the resumption of MacDougal were in the 150s. Clearly, I was hallucinating. This was, I discovered later, to be a major theme of the offline scheduled at NYC's Minetta Tavern, at 7 p.m.; a scant 30 minutes from the time I reversed direction. Time was running out.

Accustomed to being late for such events, however, I took the time to wander around the Village. I passed up numerous opportunities to have various parts of my body aerated, and instead knelt down in obeisance at the temple of American jazz, the Blue Note. But, the clock continued to tick, and it was now time. I turned the corner, and there it wasgleaming in psychedelic black and off-black: Minetta Tavern. I noticed a disheveled local insisting that the valet treat his tricycle with care.

Upon entering, I was struck by how the overhead lights seemed to swing to and fro, a remarkable achievement considering how they were encased within the ceiling itself. Ravi Shankar accelerated the pace of his raga. A tuxedo-suited host wearing tiny round sunglasses accepted my suit jacket, and offered me beads and a daisy. He then showed me to the back, through a jasmine-scented hall of Indian saris acting as curtains, and lit from above by pulsating purple lights.

Disappointingly, the room in which we emerged was completely empty, except for some floating teeth. As I stared, a face coalesced around the teeth, and then a body. I chuckled with relief; this wasn't Wonderland, it was just Chris Coad, resplendent in a nehru jacket and a sarong. He hadn't noticed me, engrossed as he was in an out-of-body experience triggered by memorizing a list of 1951's New York Times bestseller list. Chris' upcoming appearance on the famous TV game show Press Your Luck had him in full cram mode, and I had thus far politely ignored the practiced shouts of "No Whammies! STOP!!" he engaged in at home.

I sat, then stood, then sat again. I inquired as to the whereabouts of the restroom, and was informed to look for it in the spare room. But the only door I found there was the one affixed to a rather large clothes closetwhich, figuring I had nothing to lose, I opened. The distant sound of a flushing toilet convinced me, and I stepped into the wardrobe closet, pushed past some rather musty coats, and found myself in a sort of wintry outdoor lavatory. A street lamp glowed above me. I shrugged, and proceeded to go about my businessundisturbed, except for a brief interruption by a goat-headed, human-bodied creature trudging sullenly through the snow and muttering about enzymes.

When I returned, a man with a period (something you don't see every day) had joined Chris, who was now memorizing the military hierarchy of the Huns. What immediately struck me about Period Man was not his vivid red beard, but the two enormous phalluses he bore. "How odd," I thought. However, it turned out that his giant priapic appendages were actually magnums. Relief washed over with me, for who could compete with such largesse?

Others filtered in (except Domaine d'Andezon, which remained unfiltered and as a result had to be thrown out). Bob Ross entered, complaining that some idiot with a tricycle had scratched his Bentley. The man they call "Irrepressible," bearing a case of Bourgueil and Beaujolais. NJJoe, still day-trading on the British Colombian market. And others. It soon became clear that the New York WLDGers had two things in common: nothing, and wives far more vivacious than they really deserved (some of the wives even had class). The latter was something with which I could relate, and so I sat, satisfied that all was proceeding normally. I couldn't have been more wrong.

The arrival of the other two traveling guests, Rob Adler (resplendent with San Francisco jokes aplenty, along with several packages he claimed were "from the real Haight") and Mike Dashe (who seemed confused at the number of people at the table named Peter Finklestein, Peter Steinfesser, and Peter Picklepepper, but as an easygoing California-type affably chose to ignore it), meant that a start could be made. And so, in similar fashion to Boston offlines (where the whites are completed before menus are issued), we began.

Phallus number one (and more than enough phallus for anyone, though the myth that "bigger is always better" remains somewhat of a phallusy) was the 1989 Trimbach Riesling Cuve Frdric mile (in magnum). Closed at first, but opening nicely by 7pm the following Thursday, this was pretty classic Fred (said the guy with the red head). Salty, almost impenetrable limestone, thick minerals, then softening with time. The tight finish remained constant, though; so unyielding was this wine that it was almost Hune-like. Irrepressible asked what fruit he was tasting, which catalyzed a vibrant conversation about the difference between rocks and plums, and the wonder of people who actually chew on rocks.

A 1995 Mann Gewurztraminer Steingrubler was also cast in the same austere mold, with typical lychee and spiced apple flavors giving way to an extremely dry chalkiness on the finish. Minerals abounded, though Irrepressible was loathe to mention them again. This was followed by a true rarity, the 1955 Dornfesser Chasselas Neiderschwihrler "Cuve Bon Choucroute", which proves the ridiculousness of the old adage "chasselas doesn't age 45 years, you nincompoop!" Triumphant and even a bit youthfully woolly, this was a wine for the ages, though there seemed to be vanishingly little of it.

"If you don't like this, then you don't like German riesling," opined the periodic one. Who was I to argue? AP# 2 583 154 08 99 was redolent of spring blossoms and lime, turning to green apple and violets as the mild sweetness slipped about the tongue. Minerals, yes, and drying acidity that was perhaps a bit bitter at this point. Needs time.

Noted wine importer and porn star Melissa Dressenger then started touting the merits of his newest acquisition, and his first California property. He insisted on some sort of lengthy preface about "irrigational dry-humping" or "I thought this was Rat's Leap" or something, but soon realized no one was listening, and simply passed the wine. And what a wine: 1998 Frog's Leap Sauvignon Blanc Napa is perhaps the most splendid jewel in the Louis/Massengil portfolio. "Like Newark during a thaw," I wrote in my notes, "but thank God there's plenty of acidity." Growing agitated at the growing enthusiasm for his new property, he quickly gathered the remnants of the wine and guzzled it straight from the bottle.

There was much dismay at this display of bad manners (though Irrepressible wants to have a future offline based around that theme: the NYC Chug'n'Glug Airborne Animals Offline), and so we moved on to a much less Jerseyesque wine: 1998 Hubert Laferrere Mcon-Chardonnay. I didn't know what kind of grape "Mcon" was, but bookworm Chris Coad explained that it's actually a region in France. "Well," I thought, "how silly. Who would actually name a chardonnay after a region? Why, next you'll be telling me that there's no fermented emperor in Corton-Charlemagne. How can you expect to get 96 points from noted chardonnay expert James Laube if you insist on devaluing the legendary 'chardonnay' name?" Nevertheless, this was an interesting wine. Mineral, shy at first, some botrytisy sticky pear and peach flavors, but with an odd finish of canned peas. Lacking someone to properly explain the wine to us, we turned to Drizzler, who at this point was speaking entirely in abbreviations. "AXR1, UCD1, B-52, OU812, M.A.S.H." he replied. Well, OK, but I'm not sure I agree.

TXJoe produced a wine he'd just picked up at the corner packie, 1998 Fritz Hirtzbirger Singerriedel-Riesling Smaragd. Why New Yorkers insist on such dreck when Gallo and KJ are more than willing to supply them with excellent supermarket brands, I can't imagine. Begrudgingly, I tasted the wine: fat banana nose (incidentally, one of my favorite bands from the sixties), grapefruit and bracing acidity, raw peanuts and exceedingly long. And some botrytis, maybe, perhaps? Anyway, killer juice, made better by the extreme distaste shown for it by Irrepressible, surely a key indicator of Austrian greatness if there ever was one. We voted this the "R" wine of the night, though noting that while this was truly an 8-"R" wine, Michael Pronay could undoubtedly come up with the all-time "R" champion while making his next spelling-correction pass through the WLDG. Also, who knew that old Georg was so loved in his own country that they named a grape after him?

At this point (or one very near iteverything is hazy in retrospect) the menus arrived. Printed with ultraviolet ink on black velvet backgrounds, too. We all switched on our "black lights" to select the veal chop of our choice. Ravi's frenetic thumping and wailing was replaced by a strange music that could only be described as a jam session between Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan and the Chocolate Watch Band, with Carmine Appice on cowbell. As the mirrorball descended and twinkling multicolored lights interfered with our menu-studying (Chris was too engrossed in 1996 Standard Oil Production Figures to pay much attention, mumbling that he'd just have "whatever veal chop sounds good"), a sweet haze filled the room.

We were suddenly and inexplicably ravenously hungry, and requested that the restaurant simply line up the veal calves at our table. And bring extra forks, please. Yet it seemed no amount of young pre-beef could sate our appetites. So we returned to the wine.

1971 Huet Vouvray "Le Haut Lieu" Demi-Sec would have won the Thunderbird Prize, if anyone could have borne to mention it and Thunderbird in the same sentence. A truly spectacular wine (of the rare demi-sec variety, which - we have been assured by wine importers with 355 years in the business - is not actually made anywhere in the world, which makes this non-existent wine all the more special). "Awesome" I wrote in my Palm, blubbering Rovanically over the sheer love emanating from this beverage. Quinine, lotion, a perfect balance of sweetness and acidity, large-scaled but still youthfulthe Methuselah of wines, man, and a way cool and trippin' white. Dude.

They brought our beef early, though it appeared to be a wine. Strange, but a mellow California mood was settling over us, and we set to with knife and fork. After some spillage, we found the technique, and were able to consume most of the 1998 Puzelat "Clos du Tue-Buf" Cheverny "La Callire". Gritty, strawberry and raspberry, dirty cranberriesman, this beef is a bummer. The dirt softens in the mouth, with some musty tobacco flavors, and a vegetarian finish. Or maybe it's just corked. Bad spot, man, to be after the wowzer Huet.

And hey dude, here's a straggler: 1989 Mittnacht-Klack Riesling Muhlforst "Selction des Grains Nobles". Low residual sugar (though man, we could really use some sugar right nowlike, you got any, man?), with more mustiness. Man, I hate it when Mom doesn't clean this attic. It's like buzzkiller moldy up here. But hey, peace. Anyway, closed nose, lightly sweet, pear and apple, a bit flowery. Light, and apparently not for the long haul. Speaking of which, who's got the U-Haul, man? My VW Bus is like wasted, and I want to spread some love on my way up to Canada, yknow?

The mood at the table started to shift upon the arrival of three things: food, the 1997 Brown Zinfandel Napa, and a herd of dancing pink BLINK tags. The haze was clearing, and the sugar we had been clamoring for a few minutes (or was it hours?) ago suddenly appeared in handy tablet form. Well, all right! And maybe it was that delicious sugar that ruined the taste of the wine, which was black peppery and lightly spicy, brambly and almost OK, but possessed of a really nasty residual sugar that made it taste like that nasty black cherry soda pop you get at Wal-Mart. Gasping for a better zinany better zinwe seized on the nearest Ridge bottle, hoping to sate our frenzy. Unfortunately, it wasnt zin at all. Instead, we were faced with the 1996 Ridge Syrah Lytton Estate, which was like heavily-peppered meat grilled over flowers, but with much vanillin oakiness on the finish. Tasty black cherries are hanging out (like K*Mart black cherry soda pop, I guess), and maybe this will come around in a few years.

I noticed something a little odd with my soup, which appeared to be bubbling. Borne on each of the little bubbles was a small Disney character singing the song he/she/it was associated with. I looked up to express my surprise to Mike Dashe, but he had started flashing. No, I dont mean he was taking off his clothes (though Oleg would do that, later), but he was actually blinking in and out of existence. A small gnat flew by in slow-motion, and I counted 35,892 beats of its wings while Matt Lewis/Drudgener opined about clonal selection in Greenland. But my attention was diverted as his flapping tongue detached itself from his body, drifted downward towards a pair of wines, and attached itself to the labels. And thus, the wines became: 1997 Ducellier "Le Chemins de Bassac" Vin de Pays Ctes de Thongue "Cap de lHomme" (blueberry, licorice, thin and short, uninteresting) and 1997 Ducellier "Le Chemins de Bassac" Vin de Pays Ctes de Thongue "Pierre Elie" (meaty, weightier, big and nutty, most definitely worthy of further study).

Somewhat unnerved at the loss of his tongue, which made it hard to continue his lecture on pit management in Bugey, Dressnelstein pulled his chair back from the table and attempted to conduct his own offline. For a time, chaos reigned, and the pile of bottles in Jossners Confederacy of Tongueless Minetta Winos quickly grew to unmanageable numbers (the gnat helped me countthere were well over 350 bottles), while Robs attempt to regain control of the proceedings by reciting hundreds of limericks failed.

But Joxers breakaway republic came to an abrupt and violent end when Montgomery Scott swooped the shuttlecraft Risa through the room (narrowly missing the mirrorball), snagged Louis LXII/Dressner MCMLXVI in a tractor beam, and recalibrated the boson field modulator while boosting the containment field. The maneuver was successful, but it had the unintended effect of shrinking all the bottles on the table by 50%. While Engineers Scott and LaForge attempted to redirect the tetrion emissions and restore our vinous bounty to its rightful size, we enjoyed a 1997 Viader Cabernet Sauvignon/Franc Napa (half-bottle).

OK, maybe "enjoyed" is misleading. This is a dessert wine, meaning that it actually tastes like dessert. Buttered chocolate, and more chocolate, but no fruit anywhere. Best enjoyed while sitting in an oak chair at an oak desk, in the middle of an oak forest, saying "OK" to Okies in Oklahoma while reading a biography of Annie Oakley and her Okinawan tour.

The Treknobabble ended just as all the oxygen and hydrogen in the air separated with a loud poof, drenching those of us not prepared with our finely-knit samurai armor. While others dried themselves off with towels fresh of the Neptune shuttle, we tried to recover from the woody assault of the Viader with a full-size bottle of 1997 Domaine des Penses Sauvages Corbires. Alas, it was not to be. Big and chewy, full of black and bell peppers, rustic and nice, but the victim of a mild corkiness. That this wine was still enjoyable despite the Curse of the Yaniger (a legend Rob promised to tell us as soon as he finished assembling his four-dimensional head) surely means something, though Im not sure what.

Main courses then arrived: a long procession of white-gloved (and two-headed) waiters bearing an infinite number of veal chops on platters made of some sort of superconductive plasma. Or maybe those were the sides. Thickly-accented babble filled the air, though discriminating between that of the waiters and that of wine importers and fun guys Abe & Louis Dooley was somewhat difficult. Thankfully, the hallucinatory atmosphere began to submit to reality. Noses returned to their proper faces, the camels stopped their poker game, and Andrew forgot the rest of the words to "Stairway to Heaven." The was a brief silence, and then a persistent yet annoying sniffing and snuffling started around the room. Bob Ross developed a sudden urge to return to his BMW and fondle the car phone. WVJoe called his broker. The TV in the corner came to life, and pictured Michael Douglas (with well-greased hair) lecturing Charlie Sheen about something. A fat, bloated man in a white tux with the word "disco" emblazoned on his chest staggered into the room, gasped his last breath, and died. We shrugged, suddenly nervous about the rapid passage of time and our own portfolios, and ordered up some more wine. Punctuation Man whipped out the second of his phalli. Hey, careful with that thing!

1964 Beychevelle Saint-Julien (magnum). Hey, is it hot in here? Why is everyone sweating? I feel the need to take off my skinny tie. This is, despite some pre-tasting negativity from The One Who Ends His Sentence At The Beginning, is absolutely delicious. Fairly big, still, with graphite and some fennel sausage on the nose. OK, this is enticing, but perhaps it is very slightly chunky after all. More graphite on the palate, fruitiness, tobaccoa very nice wine, and given that this bottle apparently saw mediocre storage, theres no hurry for those of you with giant priapuses. Uh, I mean magnums.

All of this talk of phalli made the men in the room realize that they were suddenly unable to perform. Literally, they could not get their forks from the plate to their mouths. More sniffling, and Chris developed an uncontrollable nasal itching. Irrepressible actually started to bleed. Quick, more wine!

The 1988 Vietti Barolo Brunate rode to the rescue on a giant horse (look at the nose on that thing! If only), with classic tar and rose characteristics bridled with ash and some gritty tannin. Long, long finish. A star in the making, but perhaps a little difficult tonight. As were the next two wines, finally released from bondage by the now steady-state Mike Dashe. Claiming bottle shock would affect the two newly-bottled and shipped wines, he nevertheless passed his babies around the room, all the while nervously fingering the three spoons he had requested from the waitstaff. And it was true that the 1998 Dashe Zinfandel Dry Creek Valley was rather dense and thick, tasting mostly of blueberry and oak. But its big brother, the 1998 Dashe Zinfandel "Todd Brother Ranch" Alexander Valley, was brawny enough to push through its fresh-oak cocoon and emerge as an explosion of black fruit with some ageworthy tannin. Theres still plenty of oak there, but even one day later (at another tasting, if anyone could actually believe that there would be another tasting after this one) both wines were showing better.

Jen started to shake and quiver, and sprinted to the jukebox, dumping in a bag of quarters and selecting the entire Huey Lewis & the News discography. Thus fortified with the peppy melody of "I Want A New Drug," we proceeded to dance jerkily (and as far from each other as possible) around the room, on top of the table, and in the restroom (in which it seemed that the stalls were permanently occupied by people with bad colds). Despite loud protests from the corner (where he was once again trying to start his own offline) that Huey Lewis was his original business partner, we ignored Mr. Big Shot Wine Importer and moved on to complete my wine jerky mini-vertical with the 1996 Gourt de Mautens Ctes-du-Rhne-Villages Rasteau. Hmmmnot as tasty as the 97. It turns out that the wine was corked, but it was still more enjoyable than the 98.

As everyone seems to recover from their nasal congestion and is overcome with a baggy-eyed drowsiness, we attack the last red: 1982 Muga Rioja "Prado Enea Gran Reserva", which is little more than oak-smoked bacon burnt at the edges.

The ever flexible Minetta delivered our dessert cart, which seems oddly decorated with what used to be referred to in polite society as "marital aids." Puzzled, we select our sweeties for the evening, while the Huey Lewis marathon gives way to an odd juxtaposition of Princes "Darling Nikki" and trance music. Have we stumbled into a rave? Regardless, we have dessert wines to taste, and we lick our lips and giggle as we dive into the first.

1989 Huet Vouvray "Cuve Constance" is super-concentrated, with gobs of unctuous layers of hedonistic lip-smacking juice so good I poured the entire wine down my well-satisfied gullet and let out a loud burp worthy of the Order of Merit. Others, though, thought the wine to be highly concentrated but backed with strong acidity, honeyed, and possessing an exquisite finish. Personally, I didnt think those unimaginative sorts used enough adjectives.

I felt a hand stroking my back, but when I inquired as to its origin no one seemed to know what I was talking about. With Bob Ross on one side of me and the first half of the Periodic Table on the other, I couldnt imagine what might be happening. I noticed, though, that Rob and Ilene had disappeared. Pressing on, we uncorked a 1975 Oremus Tokaji Asz 5 Puttonyos, a wine that lacked only Michael Pronays instructive spelling lessons to achieve completeness. If corn could fall victim to botrytis, this is what it would taste like, though bracing acidity and a long, piercing nectarine flavor emerges from the maz of flavors. This wine completely dominated the one that followed, the 1994 Ostertag Gewurztraminer Fronholz "Vendange Tardive", which promised all sorts of fat smoky cashew, bacon, and peachy citrusness, but completely fell apart from the midpalate on. Perhaps it needed to spend another 15 years in barrique to achieve real Alsatian typicity, but tonight it was mostly just disappointing.

Rob and Ilene returned, sharing some private joke, but now Irrepressible and Josephine Druschetti had escaped to places unknown. Jen had affixed some sort of collar to Andrew. Even Chris and FLJoe were eyeing each other. Clearly, we needed more wine, though it was hard to hear that request over the throbbing yet mesmerizing erotic meanderings coming from the speakers. Just then, a wandering refugee who claimed he had escaped from some Burgundian bacchanal offered us his wine. Initially, we refused, thinking this straggler to be some sort of odd oenological bum, but we soon felt sympathy for his sad tale of woe. It seemed he had been dragging this bottle from tasting to tasting for the last 21 years, but had been caught in some sort of existentialist wine hell in which tastings always ended just before he could open his prized wine. And thus, we uncorked a 1979 Parc "Domaine du Mas Blanc" Banyuls "Cuve de la Saint Martin", full of bitter chocolate, thyme, raisin, and vanilla. In near-perfect balance slightly marred only by a brief encounter with a bit of alcoholic heat, this was a wine worth waiting for. Our visitor thanked us, and tried to leave, but he found No Exit.

As the heat in the room increased, and Andrew attempted to sip wine through the small hole in his leather mask, we noted the return of Irrepressible and Droolis Lessner. The former had donned a frilly lace thong and red leather boots, while the latter was resplendent in a lovely Versace dress open to the navel and Prada shoes. Perhaps there was even a little mascara in use, though we were too polite to comment. Instead, we opened what appeared to be the last wine, and an unfortunately unmendable victim of our earlier experiments with the space-time continuum. The 1997 Quinta do Noval Vintage Porto (half-bottle) was too young and simple to follow the Banyuls, though its thick and velvety structure was certainly enticing.

Fortified (sorry) for our journey home, we quickly escaped from the ever-weirder Minetta Tavern only to be knocked on our backs by the arrival of Ms. Lisa Allen, late but determined to consume her share of the vinous bounty. Much sidewalk merrymaking ensued as Lisa power-sniffed her way through the lineup, at which point she re-emerged to query us about the discarded underthings on Irrepressibles chair. We claimed ignorance, and stayed to watch Abe Vigoda shakily pedal off on his tricycle. Feeling satisfied at yet another successful outing, Chris, Lisa, Oleg, and myself boarded a taxi headed for the World Trade Center, pausing only to wonder at the struggling man being dragged from Minetta by federal DEA agents.

And thus, we came to a sad end. For our cabbie made the ill-advised choice to race the wrong way up a one-way street. As we perished in a fiery conflagration, we heard the lecturing voice of Nancy Reagan, reminding us once again to "Just Say No." If only we had paid more attention to those ABC After-School Specials

Hold on. Where's the goulash?!
 
[Note: I apologize for the peculiar accenting on the title of this post, but after several test posts it has become clear that those people who have browser issues related to that little squiggly accent and have thus been trapped inside the 'Joo' thread of March 3rd are now only able to participate in threads with this accent in the title. It's still not clear if this 'capture' problem has to do with BASIC- or COBOL-based browsers, or perhaps Atari 800 computers, or if it's some kind of a cookie issue (I'm no techie, so I certainly haven't a clue), but I'm sure it will be sorted out soon and we can all go back to titles without squiggly accents in them. In the meantime, however, I think it's a matter of mercy to let those folks who are trapped in the earlier thread come a little closer to the virtual surface of the board. Thanks for your patience--cc]

Last Tuesday I wandered into Minetta Tavern at 6:45 only to find to my amazement that I was the first geek on the scene (for the first time ever), avoiding my usual last-minute rush and scramble. Needless to say, I was ecstatic--strangely so, even. This feeling of warmth and emotional attunement to the greater cosmos stayed with me as long as I was at Minetta.

Soon thereafter the first of the evening's three guests of honor arrived in the form of The Mighty Thor Iverson himself, followed closely by some of the usual local suspects--the irrepressible Bradley Kane, .sasha, as well as Andrew Munro Scott and Jennifer Clark, happily classless for this evening. That wily swain Bob Ross is there, and Oleg O. comes in all aglow (freshly returned from a pilgrimage to Napa, Land of Milk and Honey), with his pal .misha along to see the show. We mill about uncertainly until .sasha, in a gesture of raw potency, whips out a frightfully butch bottle, a magnum of Trimbach Riesling Cuve Frederic Emile 1989, and places it center stage. We admire its substantial girth and move quickly to consume as much of it as we can before the stragglers arrive.

89 Fred: Pale straw color, veering into pale lemon at the center of the glass; ooh, its got a nose that means business, fragrantly rich, stern and velvety--an iron nose in a velvet noseglove. White flowers and minerals, a touch of gasoline, good riesling fruit. Tastes like it smells, a tightly-coiled big wine with a smooth steely spine surrounded by a layer of citrus-rock cream, tangy and lingering a long time around the tonsils. Very young still, very rich and pretty (if such a strong wine can be called pretty without impugning it), just showing tiny signs of loosening up a bit around the edges.

Here's an Albert Mann Gewrztraminer Steingrubler 1995: Pale straw; lightly floral-spritzy nose, delicate notes of honey and roses. .sasha wonders if this is the product of granite soil. I wonder, too, but only because .sasha wondered first. .sasha is on my right, and I find that if I hear him say something I can repeat it to the people on my left, who are then suitably impressed with my perspicacity. Sweet-smelling and smooth, with a nice medium-weight mouthfeel, more typical gewrzy-lychee flavors appear in the midpalate along with a pronounced minerality, couched with very nicely balanced acidity and no heaviness or overt viscosity. Finishes strong but not terribly long, a very nice balanced elegant package of gewrz.

A helmeted Abe Dressner arrives, having biked in from his busy, busy workplace, followed closely by SFJoe, cellphone fastened to his ear like that critter in Alien. Abe surveys the scene, pulls bottle after bottle from his magic bag, pronounces the ceremonial benediction "Let the drunken festivization begin!" and we're off once more.

Hubert Laferrere Macon-Chardonnay 1998: Pale straw; light, lemon-pear-cream hints with a touch of rainwater underneath, aromatically light and fresh-smelling. A light, smooth, easy-drinking Macon, tangy and crisp and on the lean side, not terribly complex, but a pleasant little chardonnay that might actually go well with food, light and silky in the mouth.

Wll Schaefer Reslng Kabnett Wehlener Sonnenuhr 1998er: A.P. Number 2 58315 408 99.

Frog's Leap Sauvignon Blanc Napa 1998: Pale, pale straw; this wine is apparently the result of either dry farming or dry humping, whatever either of those techno-oenological terms means. Peculiar nose of green plastic lime-juice container with some soft creamy notes behind it. Kind of round in the mouth but with some pointy acidity that doesn't seem to be in the same glass as the limpid fruit, really a little peculiar. Thor can only say "I haven't had a wine like this in a pig fit of Sundays" which is apparently some kind of Bostonian wine jargon. With air it settles a bit and gets both flatter and pointier. Needs time; try again in thirty years.

More guests of honor arrive--Rob and Ilene Adler, transfer students from the West Coast WLDG clan, and Mike Dashe, Eighth Avatar of Zinshnu, God of Zinfandel--and they are welcomed accordingly, with murmured obeisances and much genuflecting and forelock-pulling. The cry goes up--Barkeep, more glasses, more wine, more of your finest meats and cheeses!

Franz Hirtzberger Spitzer Riesling Singerriedel Smaragd 1999: Good whiff of sulfur from this one right off the bat. Wait a bit... still there... fading... okay, underneath there's a bright stony-appley-lemon-hay nose with a hint of vinyl (sheet metal?) in the mix. Very crisp, very tart, a big wine that's got a lot going on but is very very young and aggressive and a little overwhelming. Puzzling.

Huet Vouvray Le Haut Lieu Demi-sec 1971: Light gold color; crikey, this smells amazing. Lush, honeyed nose that just shimmers and changes as you smell it--lemon-honey, earth, caramel, earl grey tea, leather--so complex and layered that I want to just keep swirling and sniffing, swirling and sniffing. In the mouth there's only a very light sweetness, which serves to bring out the pretty, still young and tight at the core chenin fruit, which just doesn't finish at all but keeps humming and echoing in your mouth throughout the evening. This wine still seems young, like it could go another thirty years with one hand tied behind its label. If this isn't the wine of the night it's going to be a memorable evening, because this is a real beauty.

Mittnacht-Klack Riesling Muhlforst 1989 SGN: Pale straw; light kerosene, lemon, green apple, but wait, there's a very odd industrial solvent aroma lurking in the nose of this wine that isn't terribly noticeable at first, but soon dominates and makes smelling it rather unpleasant. Tastes okay, though, lightly sweet, slightly round in the mouth. I dunno, it's hard to get past the solventlike smell.

And just like that, we're out of whites and move on to wines of color. Abe expresses relief due to a preference for wines that taste of 'framboise and cassis,' which only sounds like more techno-oenology jargon to me, but the world is very wide and I have much to learn.

Here's a red, a Brown Estate Zinfandel Napa 1997: Rich medium-dark garnet color; candied dark black-raspberry nose, with light black rubber and toasted coconut notes along with a beguiling hint of volatility. Medicinal, slightly sweet and over-pumped, with a finish that veers into a flash of heat and some tarry oakiness and lingers a bit longer than you'd like. More weird and slightly freaky than anything else.

Ridge Lytton Estate Syrah 1996: Medium-dark garnet, heading towards inkiness; a ton of sweet dark oak on the nose over a base of burnt-rubber, berry and smoke, with a hint of cheese curdiness. Very oaky, a shame. Sadly, I can no longer say I've never had a really bad wine from Ridge.

During this brief period of griping, it becomes clear that Thor and I have some kind of a separated-at-birth situation going on, and I am given the ceremonial Finger of Asgard as a sign that all is well, a favor that I happily return. Can this be true? Does the blood of the Aesir run in my veins?

Les Chemins de Bassac VdP de Ctes de Thongue Cap de l'Homme 1997: Medium garnet; leathery-dark berry fruit, some menthol. In the mouth tangy and aggressive, young bitter red-dark earthy fruit moves into a red-dark earthy-tarry finish. Young and surly, but not bad. Kind of brash and fun.

Les Chemins de Bassac VdP de Ctes de Thongue Pinot Noir 1997: Medium red color; light plum-cherry-clove aromas, tangy & ripe, surprisingly full-bodied. Dark tart fruit turns towards licorice and clove on the finish. Nice, supple pinot, not complex, but pleasant.

Lisa walks in the door just in time to throw the first red flag of the night, on a Domaine des Penses Sauvages Corbires 1997 that reeks of corkiness. Two-four-six-eight, who do we TCAte? Lisa, Lisa, yaaaayy Lisa!

Dashe Cellars Zinfandel Dry Creek Valley 1998: Medium-dark garnet; smooth soft nose, a bit quiet, with dark smoky oakiness showing through above the dark silky berry fruit. Smooth and balanced, but the fruit is a little reticent and not giving up much at this point in its young life, and some rough tannins emerge on the finish.

Dashe Cellars Zinfandel Todd Brothers Ranch Alexander Valley 1998: Medium-dark garnet; lusher, riper-smelling and more open than the Dry Creek Valley, this is drinking very nicely right now, with lovely rich raspberry-black cherry flavors very well balanced by firm acidity. There's some smoky oak here, too, but it serves to add a nice dark spiciness to the fruit. Elegant and supple, and this wine even makes the cut for the evening's theme of "Wines .sasha Can Put in His Mouth," a true rarity for a California wine.

Chteau Sociando-Mallet 1985: Half the table seems to have decided this wine is corked, but they are trigger-happy. Fortunately, I listen to Andrew's advice to try it myself. Medium red, with just the tiniest hint of bricking at the rim. Graphite-rich nose, with a tight base of oregano-tinged blackcurrant fruit & hints of cedar, still rather tight and minerally, not giving up much. I've been wondering if the fruit would fade before the structure on this one, and this bottle isn't doing much to resolve the issue, as it still seems coiled and fairly tight. The midpalate seems to be a little more dilute than I remember, but the finish is tangy and smooth and gravelly. Still tight, needs more time. Will the fruit last?

Bodegas Muga Prado Enea Gran Reserva 1982: Medium to medium-light ruby color, with some amber at the rim. Carrot-cakey clove and cedar notes flit around over a base of very soft muted red fruit, layered and interesting to smell, with some leather and tobacco hints peeping out with a little encouragement. It's a little less interesting in the mouth, the acidity is slightly shrill and dominates some slightly tired tart sour-cherry fruit.

Domaine Gourt de Mautens Rasteau 1996: Brought to complete the Son of Odin's recent trio of Gourt vintages, this wine is dark and deep and red--rough, dense, oaky and tannic. SFJoe taps me on the shoulder: "This wine" he says "is a mouthful of steel wool." Good enough for me. The wielder of Mjolnir says that it is in fact better than the wine-jerky 1998 version, so perhaps there's hope for the jerky a few years down the road. There's a bit of leathery mustiness that has me eying Lisa, but it isn't too overt.

Viader Napa Valley 1997: Medium-dark garnet; cassis with chocolate on the nose, soft and slightly rough in the mouth--gritty textured aggressive tannins beat up on soft, fleshy fruit. I only get about a half-ounce of this, so it's a bit hard to figure out, but it seems a little flat & fleshy to me.

Chteau Beycheville 1964: Another Alpha Bottle, a magnum. Medium translucent ruby. Plenty going on here aromatically; cedar, stewed tomato, muted earthy red fruit, faded but still quite interesting. On first tastage there is a certain limpidity to the mouthfeel, but the wine soon rallies, and by the midpalate some bracing tartness kicks in that carries through to a good finish. Soft and smooth and silky, if unlayered, and, while not profound, does well for itself. I'd drink any more of it fairly soon, though.

Vietti Barolo Brunate 1988: Medium ruby, bricking slightly at the rim. Leathery, earthy muted cherry fruit , nice layered mix of flavors, crisp acidity buoys up the tangy red fruit that has an interesting rhubarb note in the midpalate. Tangy, crisp & long, my favorite of the reds so far. Oh, wait, we're out of reds. My favorite red of the night, then.

On to the sweeties.

Domaine Ostertag Gewrztraminer Fromholz VT 1994: Medium straw-gold. Flinty aromas mix with pale rose & light lychee, but there's a flat quality to the fruit here, it seems suppressed and subterrranean, and a nice crisp base mouthfeel just doesn't quite gel around the fruit. With time and air the gewrziness emerges a bit, but it still seems a bit fuzzy and gnarled.

Huet Vouvray Cuve Constance 1989: There is more talk of corkiness when this is poured, but I'm not sure--there are rich, lush apricot-pineapple aromas, and something like the mythical wet wool in there with it--Drezler calls it 'off,' but there's a great deal of sweetness and power balanced with firm acidity. A big, powerful sweet and viscous wine. Finishes with wool and tea notes as the lush fruit subsides. Maybe a bit off, but still a lovely mouthful.

Quinta do Noval Porto 1997: Deep purply-black. Rich, lush, berry-brambly-nettley nose, cocoa and spice, thick and dense-smelling but fairly accessible and open. Fairly sweet, maybe sweeter than I like, but there's a ton of rich, deeply coiled fruit and good acidity. A compelling infant.

Domaine du Mas Blanc Banyuls Cuve de la Saint Martin 1979: This bottle is cunningly disguised as a Nuits St. Georges, and it appears to be a refugee of some kind that Bob has been spiriting around in hopes of finding just the right crowd to appreciate it. We happily oblige. Medium-dark ruby, hinting at amber at the rim; cocoa and soft dark raspberry hit you on the nose, couched in dark earthy truffliness. Medium-sweet, very smooth and well balanced, a lighter wine than the previous two, but one with a good deal of strength and richness in its own right. Dark cocoa-berry flavors swirl through the midpalate and linger in a medium-length finish. Very nice.

Well, the wines were coming fast and furious all night, and I think I only missed two or three, which is a good ratio for me, especially since I am dragged off in the middle of the evening for an delightful impromptu job fair. Another session of festivization in the Big Apple comes to a close as we make our final tributes to the guests of honor, and people make their farewells and stagger off into the night.

Y'all come on back now, y'hear?
 
Now that's good times.

We had so much more energy then, yeah? So much youthful optimism. Oh, how time has worked its woe on us...
 
Yeah, it's fairly sad. What optimistic young kids we were, kind of like Joe Perry except without the moderator-screwing.

Oh, no, wait...

Hey, and the job fair that I spoke of at the end was of the Adlerian variety. Has anybody seen Rob Adler?
 
originally posted by Frank Deis:
The other palpitation I had recently was when Sharon was talking about how everything in her cellar was "stacked." I am just a sick-o but at least I know it.

Reminds me of the "project" my friend Hal and I once worked on as undergrads: a compendium of words that sound naughty but really aren't.

Pussyfooting.
Crotchety.
Titmouse.

etc. etc. etc.
 
originally posted by Thor:
Now that's good times.

We had so much more energy then, yeah? So much youthful optimism. Oh, how time has worked its woe on us...

Great! But, next time please repost under its own thread with the original title and if you can, include the original post date. If you prefer a snazzier acronym than RTN, use it in the title. Just trying to make things easier and clearer.
 
originally posted by Chris Coad:
Has anybody seen Rob Adler?

This was my last view of him this past July:

Rob_got_some_sun.jpg
 
originally posted by Brad Kane:
originally posted by Thor:
Now that's good times.

We had so much more energy then, yeah? So much youthful optimism. Oh, how time has worked its woe on us...

Great! But, next time please repost under its own thread with the original title and if you can, include the original post date. If you prefer a snazzier acronym than RTN, use it in the title. Just trying to make things easier and clearer.

You know, we give and give, and still there are selfish people who demand more.

Where are all these easy/clear reposts of yours, Bradley?
 
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