TN: Blind Gigondas

MarkS

Mark Svereika
Mostly Gigondas, except for the ringers (they are always everpresent). A fun night, tasting wines and not being way laid by the Southern heat.

1 - Muted nose of plums and minerals. Some sweet notes come out after swirling, very perfumed finish, gum mastic and slight bubblegum. Needs age: youthful (2-3 years?). Alcohol becomes more noticeable with air. A-/B+

2 - Meatier than previous. More of a syrah component? Softer in the mouth, with a sweeter mouth feel. Cherry-plum. Bubblegum finish that becomes off putting with more time spent here. B+

3 - Perfumey. Fresh and lively with strong tannins. Woody note on the aroma. Young. A 2010 or 12? Needs 3-4 more years. Strawberry finish, with slight bubblegum, just not as pronounced as in the first two. A-

4 - Musky aromas. Sweet gum mastic, garrigue, nice structured tannins on the finish. Feels like a Chateauneuf. A-

5 - Dark black cherry red colored (darkest so far). Slight alcohol in the back. Dark black fruits of blackberry, loganberry. Very smooth and rich, sweet, cigar tobacco. 2009? A-

6 - Nice acidity. Roses! Smooth, with a slight tannic bite. Very fresh feeling. Drink now and hold 4-5 years. A-

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1 - Domaine Notre Dame des Pallieres, Gigondas, 'Les Mourres', 2010
[Grenache 45%, Syrah 10%, Mourvedre 10%] 14.5%
This wine had a very closed nose from the beginning through to the end. It never seemed to fully open up.

2 - Guigal, Gigondas, 2007
[Grenache 65%, Mourvedre 25%, Syrah 10%] 14%
That structured component I thought might be more syrah must have been from the rather high
mourvedre percentage.

3 - Pierre Amadieu, Gigondas, 'Romane Machotte', 2009
[Grenache 80%, Syrah 20%] 14.5%

4 - Pierre Amadieu, Gigondas, 'Romane Machotte', 2012
[Grenache 80%, Syrah 20%] 14.5%

5 - Domaine de l'Ange, Chateauneuf-du-Pape, 2010
[Grenache 70%, Syrah 20%, Mourvedre 10%] 14%

6 - Sandlands, Mataro, California, 2010
13.6% I can see why folks get excited by these. This had freshness and FUN running through it and was
simply a joy to drink and go back to.

Many of these wines showed quite well, but the first 3 had noticeable bubblegum on the end which I found a little off putting. The quality level was quite high, overall. A fun tasting of an often overlooked region of France.
 
Mark, I was hoping that the Gonet Gigondas '10 was included in your report so I could see if anyone besides me likes that bottling.

. . . . Pete
 
I am surprised by the showings of the two Pierre Amadieu wines. I haven't tasted them, but I hadn't been that impressed with them a few years ago. I will have to try them again.
 
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
I am surprised by the showings of the two Pierre Amadieu wines. I haven't tasted them, but I hadn't been that impressed with them a few years ago. I will have to try them again.

Jon, this was my first encounter with them, and before, had never really heard of them before. Never realized they were as big a player as they are, but one source said they were the largest Gigondas producer. Huh, imagine that.
 
Yes, Amadieu is a huge name in Gigondas. Someone told me they own about 10% of the appellation. Last time I tasted the wine, it had significant wood on it. As I said, I'll have to try it again.
 
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