What are you going to drink tomorrow night?

originally posted by Brian C:

That Foti is something special.

Thanks so much for the tip.

I am really thankful we have a reliable distributor for the Dressner wines in the state now.
John actually comes to B'ham every two weeks or so!

The 14 Pinon Silex Noir is very delicious. Great combination of citrus, orchard fruit, flower and chalk. The nose tightened up considerably with air. It is slightly sweeter than sec to me, maybe sec tendre? The sugar helps as there seems to be plenty of acidity. In the past I've typically finished my Pinon Vouvrays when they were young, but this may a good vintage to cellar some.
 
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
originally posted by Jay Miller:
I'll be drinking the same thing I've been drinking for the last week and a half. Cough syrup.

Hopefully the antibiotics I just started will have a beneficial effect.

Lots of people are getting felled by something going around. I also spent ten days unwell. But I think it was a virus. How do you know antibiotics will help?

Hope you feel better soon.

I have it as well. Picked it up in the city. Feels more like a headcold--no aches just congested and groggy.
 
originally posted by Kay Bixler:
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
originally posted by Jay Miller:
I'll be drinking the same thing I've been drinking for the last week and a half. Cough syrup.

Hopefully the antibiotics I just started will have a beneficial effect.

Lots of people are getting felled by something going around. I also spent ten days unwell. But I think it was a virus. How do you know antibiotics will help?

Hope you feel better soon.

I have it as well. Picked it up in the city. Feels more like a headcold--no aches just congested and groggy.

Sounds like Zika to me. I hear the little bugger can be gotten by two other of our insect friends besides aegis aegypti.
 
originally posted by MarkS:
originally posted by Kay Bixler:
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
originally posted by Jay Miller:
I'll be drinking the same thing I've been drinking for the last week and a half. Cough syrup.

Hopefully the antibiotics I just started will have a beneficial effect.

Lots of people are getting felled by something going around. I also spent ten days unwell. But I think it was a virus. How do you know antibiotics will help?

Hope you feel better soon.

I have it as well. Picked it up in the city. Feels more like a headcold--no aches just congested and groggy.

Sounds like Zika to me. I hear the little bugger can be gotten by two other of our insect friends besides aegis aegypti.

It can also be sexually transmitted (just sayin'). BTW, any of you listening to the Beeb yesterday, or any of 245 other news agencies, might have heard my friend Richard Kuhn talking about his newly released crystal structure of the Zika virus. Richard likes wine but isn't very picky about what he drinks.

Mark Lipton
 
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
originally posted by Jay Miller:
I'll be drinking the same thing I've been drinking for the last week and a half. Cough syrup.

Hopefully the antibiotics I just started will have a beneficial effect.

Lots of people are getting felled by something going around. I also spent ten days unwell. But I think it was a virus. How do you know antibiotics will help?

Hope you feel better soon.

I know a nurse who works in the bronch suite :)
 
originally posted by MLipton:
originally posted by MarkS:
originally posted by Kay Bixler:
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
originally posted by Jay Miller:
I'll be drinking the same thing I've been drinking for the last week and a half. Cough syrup.

Hopefully the antibiotics I just started will have a beneficial effect.

Lots of people are getting felled by something going around. I also spent ten days unwell. But I think it was a virus. How do you know antibiotics will help?

Hope you feel better soon.

I have it as well. Picked it up in the city. Feels more like a headcold--no aches just congested and groggy.

Sounds like Zika to me. I hear the little bugger can be gotten by two other of our insect friends besides aegis aegypti.

It can also be sexually transmitted (just sayin'). BTW, any of you listening to the Beeb yesterday, or any of 245 other news agencies, might have heard my friend Richard Kuhn talking about his newly released crystal structure of the Zika virus. Richard likes wine but isn't very picky about what he drinks.

Mark Lipton

One sign you have too many young friends: when you read "The Beeb" you wonder why Justin Bieber is dabbling in the Zika virus.
 
originally posted by Chris Coad:
originally posted by MLipton:
BTW, any of you listening to the Beeb yesterday, or any of 245 other news agencies, might have heard my friend Richard Kuhn talking about his newly released crystal structure of the Zika virus. Richard likes wine but isn't very picky about what he drinks.

Mark Lipton

One sign you have too many young friends: when you read "The Beeb" you wonder why Justin Bieber is dabbling in the Zika virus.

I would like to see a Venn diagram of listeners to the two Beebs.
 
Jakob Schneider Niederhäuser Hermannshöhle 2014
(how will it stack up beside donnhoff? let's see)

Domaine du Pegau, CdP Cuvee Reservee 1996
(after decades of anticipation unto suffering ..)
 
originally posted by Terry Angleton:
Jakob Schneider Niederhäuser Hermannshöhle 2014
(how will it stack up beside donnhoff?

Probably not as an equal.

But it still has a place in the world.
 
originally posted by maureen:
I aam thinking of opening a Bruno Clavelier NSG Aux Cras 2001. Anyone have this lately? Ever? Thoughts?

Sorry it took so long.

On consecutive Fruit nights, a trio of Claveliers with a modicum of age.

2001 Bruno Clavelier NSG 1er Cru Aux Cras V.V. 13.0%
Cork had lots of mold, but the wine seemed fine. Aroma on the serious side of pinot fruit, tending towards cherry & kirsch, with a halo of tertiaries. Beautiful mouthfeel, just lovely, showing balance and harmony between the parts. Very fruity, yet somehow demure. I tend to prefer the more strawberry/raspberry end of the pinot spectrum, but this was a well-developed treat.

2001 Bruno Clavelier Corton Grand Cru Le Rognet 13.0%
Comparatively closed, but also showing fruit at the darker end. Comes off as quite primary. Attractive acidity, detached before food, integrated afterwards. Delicious, refined, without the taste or smoothness of wood, but still a ways from the complexity it will surely show at peak.

2002 Bruno Clavelier NSG 1er Cru Aux Cras VV 13.5%
Even more closed than the 2001 Le Rognet, and far more than its 2001 brother. Makes me wonder if the moldy 2001 cork let more air in, making it appear more developed. This 2002 has tannins, which the others didn’t, but is equally fresh tasting, with fine acidity and harmonious balance. Pure and clear, free of wood or alcohol taint. But most of the action happens in the mouth, which thumbs its nose at the nose. Needs many more years to reach maturity.

As a comparison, this was a bit disconcerting, because the second and third wines, still quite primary, suggested retroactively that there was something irregular about the first, something that might not have surfaced otherwise.

Also, with the third wine, an interesting thing happened after we had finished the savory part of the meal. Marcia brought out a pair of low carb desserts she had made during the afternoon using Xylitol instead of sugar. Ordinarily, dry wines become exaggeratedly acidic after eating sugar, but the Xylitol-based desserts had almost no impact on them. You heard it first here. Marcia thinks this may be because Xylitol is actually a kind of (non-inebriating) alcohol. Perhaps something to be explored by the few diabetics among us, and the not so few who are weight-challenged.
 
As we know Marcia is a trained as a physician. Did she offer more hints (chemical, biological or otherwise) as to why this might be?
 
First,a succint article on the different types of sugar alcohols that serve as sugar substitutes.

Sugar (including residual sugar) change our perception of acidity through changes in the electrical charge (ions, etc.) on the surface of the tongue. Sugar alcohols don't do that, or at least nowhere near as much. So, if we drink, say, rieslings with residual sugar before dry reds, these dry reds will appear to have a different acidity than if we had drunk them by themselves.

And if we don't want dessert to interfere with dry wines, we should eat low carb desserts.
 
I've been wineless for nearly four weeks, but will break-fast this Friday evening with Laherte Freres Ultradition Rosé and Schaefer Froehlich's 2009 Felsenberg.

Also have a 2014 Villages Chambolle-Musigny from Roblot-Marchand in reserve. New producer for me, but the store was offering tastings & this seemed worth a try at the price.
 
Drinking this tonight, actually, but am too lazy to dig up the other thread.

1997 Clos Roche Blanche, Cot - Still quite purple. In the nose it is violets and stems, ripe plums and crushed rock. Perfect balance in the mouth, as always. The tannins are softening and becoming very fine but there is still plenty of grip. Juicy acids carry the finish and a wash of tannin lingers endlessly. This wine will live forever. Still fresh, vibrant and soul stirring after twenty years.
 
originally posted by Kay Bixler:
Drinking this tonight, actually, but am too lazy to dig up the other thread.

1997 Clos Roche Blanche, Cot - Still quite purple. In the nose it is violets and stems, ripe plums and crushed rock. Perfect balance in the mouth, as always. The tannins are softening and becoming very fine but there is still plenty of grip. Juicy acids carry the finish and a wash of tannin lingers endlessly. This wine will live forever. Still fresh, vibrant and soul stirring after twenty years.

A lovely summary. It must be a 93.
 
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