kirk wallace
kirk wallace
originally posted by mark e:
BTW, Is "Pavel" a current alias for the dotster?
or some other Gogol fan?
originally posted by mark e:
BTW, Is "Pavel" a current alias for the dotster?
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
It is most definitely mature, and spectacular. Try one if you've got one.
originally posted by Peter Creasey:
Mark, I'm not sure that "mature" is exactly the right word. The Leoville Las Cases '90 should be nicely within its drinking window but with plenty of time left and probably some room for improvement.
. . . . Pete
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
This sounds interesting. Please tell us more.originally posted by Robert Dentice:
... L'Abricot du Roulot liqueur
Had that one too at the same dinner, a Panos-hosted vertical. Ben G. from Calvert remarked that the '82 was dynamite on release and has never been as good since. The '89 and '90 were both stunners though.originally posted by Brad Kane:
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
It is most definitely mature, and spectacular. Try one if you've got one.
I'm with Keith here. Other than a corked couple of bottles over the years, this wine has never failed to deliver. Really great stuff that I've found has drank well from age nine, right up through the present. Now, the '82 on the other hand, I've never had one that's remotely lived up to the hype.
Well, our bottles were chateau stock so as good a baseline as any for how it ought to taste. I suppose those who keep their cellars on "refrigerate" mode in a deliberate effort to arrest development can always pipe in that nothing is ready to drink.originally posted by robert ames:
originally posted by Peter Creasey:
Mark, I'm not sure that "mature" is exactly the right word. The Leoville Las Cases '90 should be nicely within its drinking window but with plenty of time left and probably some room for improvement.
. . . . Pete
the temperature of storage (say 60 degrees vs. 50 degrees) makes this statement a meaningless generalization. neither of these temperatures will cause any damage to the wine but will have, after 27 years, a marked influence on the maturity of the wine.
originally posted by Peter Creasey:
Tom, I wouldn't have Jadot's Corton Charlemagne would have been suitable for that life span. Interesting!
I recently served and enjoyed the Comte de Vogue Vieille Vignes Musigny '85 which you would have liked. I was nervous about how it would show -- it was awesome.
. . . . . Pete