Sharon Bowman
Sharon Bowman
So, 2015 Pépière passed my palate on a quiet Sunday. Holy crow, that is electric stuff. And I'd thought the 2014 was a home run crossed with a touchdown.
originally posted by Marc Hanes:
Blind pig finds a truffle now and then.
May in part explain the texture you experienced.
Curious to see how the two versions would age, maybe an experiment is on the cusp of coming into being.
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
originally posted by Marc Hanes:
Blind pig finds a truffle now and then.
May in part explain the texture you experienced.
Curious to see how the two versions would age, maybe an experiment is on the cusp of coming into being.
Pigs don't find truffles by sighting them so a blind pig wouldn't be at much of a disadvantage. That may hold true for the other side of the analogy.
originally posted by Marc Hanes:
May in part explain the texture you experienced.
Curious to see how the two versions would age, maybe an experiment is on the cusp of coming into being.
By around six, his answer had distilled to "normal vintage." Guess he meant on average.So, I got to talk to Rémi Branger yesterday at the LDM tasting. He said that 2015 was a curious vintage because it was hot and dry, so they were looking at a small, ripe vintage, then the three weeks before harvest it rained and rained, so that the berries bloated and created a totally different vintage profile.
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
What did you make of the Gras Moutons? I never "get" that wine.
Note to pedants: They are exchanging juice, not parcels.originally posted by Ben Hunting:
A new Pépière Gorges cuvée is also mentioned, starting with the 2014 vintage, after Pépière and Brégeon exchanged parcels!