Oswaldo Costa
Oswaldo Costa
Unless they are semi-carbonic, like Durieux, or sans soufre/whole cluster packages, like recent renditions of three Chandon de Brialles cuvées. But these are a drop in the ocean.
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
Thanks for your notes. I wouldn't expect Ile and Lavieres to age like the Cotton crus, would you?
In any event, I'm cured of any temptation to open my 2005 magnums this year.
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
The youngest burgundy vintage you can get a mature-tasting wine from at the moment is probably 1998. Among the more lauded vintages, some 1996s will do it but you really have to go back to 1990. So, I figure maturity for burgundy starts in the ballpark of 20-30 years from the vintage date.
So nobody has to feel too bad if you're not backing up the truck on 2015s.
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
Ja; Marechaudes by reputation is a Carton leaning more 1er than GC, whereas Ile is a 1er leaning GC. The 09 Ile has pretty great potential.
Opened an '07 Bressandes recently, which was either too young now or just lacking enough fruit to go the distance - I imagine the former. Similarly an 07 Volnay Caillerets. I find the CdB style keeps things really lean until the wine is about ready to drink.
I've thought Lavieres has a reputation for being relatively soft, approachable early, but have only tried the CdB '12 young, and it was neither soft nor approachable.
originally posted by Pavel Tchichikov:
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
Ja; Marechaudes by reputation is a Carton leaning more 1er than GC, whereas Ile is a 1er leaning GC. The 09 Ile has pretty great potential.
Opened an '07 Bressandes recently, which was either too young now or just lacking enough fruit to go the distance - I imagine the former. Similarly an 07 Volnay Caillerets. I find the CdB style keeps things really lean until the wine is about ready to drink.
I've thought Lavieres has a reputation for being relatively soft, approachable early, but have only tried the CdB '12 young, and it was neither soft nor approachable.
Very atypical 07s from them. Mine take a good two hours to open, so I am waiting.
I can't recall 12 Lavieres at the moment, but I've tackled the 14 on more than one occasion, and it is formidably structured.
Points regarding Marechaudes vs Ile well taken, but M still has that Grand-Cru-Gevrey-put-through-a-blender complexity of the better Cortons.
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
A bottle of the sans soufre ajouté 2014 Lavières last February was fresh and giving, and seemed less structured than the two Vergelesses cuvées (albeit the latter were from 2013).
originally posted by Pavel Tchichikov:
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
A bottle of the sans soufre ajouté 2014 Lavières last February was fresh and giving, and seemed less structured than the two Vergelesses cuvées (albeit the latter were from 2013).
I had the regular and sans soufre 14 Lavieres side by side. Night and day.
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
Ja; Marechaudes by reputation is a Carton leaning more 1er than GC, whereas Ile is a 1er leaning GC. The 09 Ile has pretty great potential.
Opened an '07 Bressandes recently, which was either too young now or just lacking enough fruit to go the distance - I imagine the former. Similarly an 07 Volnay Caillerets. I find the CdB style keeps things really lean until the wine is about ready to drink.
I've thought Lavieres has a reputation for being relatively soft, approachable early, but have only tried the CdB '12 young, and it was neither soft nor approachable.
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
Nice note, Karen! (The long one, I mean.)
originally posted by Karen Goetz:
2007 and 2017 notes on 2001 Chandon des Briailles, Ile de Vergelesses 1er cruoriginally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
Ja; Marechaudes by reputation is a Carton leaning more 1er than GC, whereas Ile is a 1er leaning GC. The 09 Ile has pretty great potential.
Opened an '07 Bressandes recently, which was either too young now or just lacking enough fruit to go the distance - I imagine the former. Similarly an 07 Volnay Caillerets. I find the CdB style keeps things really lean until the wine is about ready to drink.
I've thought Lavieres has a reputation for being relatively soft, approachable early, but have only tried the CdB '12 young, and it was neither soft nor approachable.
Tasting notes on 2001 Ile de Vergelesses, Pernand-Vergelesses bought at release and stored in cellar:
Opened 1st bottle 6/26/07 Color is brilliant light scarlet, fading at the edges of the glass into scant orange-pink rim; some transparency in the scarlet as fine misty unsolid notes; color looks scarlet/bright in natural last afternoon sunlight and looks muddier and more orange in artificial light in the kitchen, later. Bouquet is high and tight, prettiness with some sharpness, musical notes hiding, then lilting, like something hiding around the corner of a rock. Tasted bright and slightly grim with stoniness at first, stony ferocity of acidity and tannins; then musical movement suddenly amongst the rocks like a brook hidden among boulders in a mountain meadow. The wine/mouth stays a bit ferocious, though it is a pretty, quiet ferocity; not a wine with big body; more like fruit gnarled into tightness by frozen winds. It melds with dinner: roasted yellow potatoes, portobello mushrooms (whole) and yellow onions sprinkled with black pepper, olive oil, rosemary... the roasted/browned onion/mushroom flavors go well with the wine and soften the wine's tannins. Stays a bit short in the mouth but fruit is haunting the severeness like a tease. I like the wine a lot.
Opened the last bottle in (2017?) and it was slender and precise and cold, but lovely; a willow branch in winter above a snowy, frozen streambed.
Shorter note in 2017..... busy.
originally posted by Pavel Tchichikov:
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
Ja; Marechaudes by reputation is a Carton leaning more 1er than GC, whereas Ile is a 1er leaning GC. The 09 Ile has pretty great potential.
Opened an '07 Bressandes recently, which was either too young now or just lacking enough fruit to go the distance - I imagine the former. Similarly an 07 Volnay Caillerets. I find the CdB style keeps things really lean until the wine is about ready to drink.
I've thought Lavieres has a reputation for being relatively soft, approachable early, but have only tried the CdB '12 young, and it was neither soft nor approachable.
Very atypical 07s from them. Mine take a good two hours to open, so I am waiting.
I can't recall 12 Lavieres at the moment, but I've tackled the 14 on more than one occasion, and it is formidably structured.
Points regarding Marechaudes vs Ile well taken, but M still has that Grand-Cru-Gevrey-put-through-a-blender complexity of the better Cortons.
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
General apology to all and sundry for misspelling Corton. How comes it to pass that I've escaped public castigation for this oversight?
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
originally posted by Karen Goetz:
2007 and 2017 notes on 2001 Chandon des Briailles, Ile de Vergelesses 1er cruoriginally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
Ja; Marechaudes by reputation is a Carton leaning more 1er than GC, whereas Ile is a 1er leaning GC. The 09 Ile has pretty great potential.
Opened an '07 Bressandes recently, which was either too young now or just lacking enough fruit to go the distance - I imagine the former. Similarly an 07 Volnay Caillerets. I find the CdB style keeps things really lean until the wine is about ready to drink.
I've thought Lavieres has a reputation for being relatively soft, approachable early, but have only tried the CdB '12 young, and it was neither soft nor approachable.
Tasting notes on 2001 Ile de Vergelesses, Pernand-Vergelesses bought at release and stored in cellar:
Opened 1st bottle 6/26/07 Color is brilliant light scarlet, fading at the edges of the glass into scant orange-pink rim; some transparency in the scarlet as fine misty unsolid notes; color looks scarlet/bright in natural last afternoon sunlight and looks muddier and more orange in artificial light in the kitchen, later. Bouquet is high and tight, prettiness with some sharpness, musical notes hiding, then lilting, like something hiding around the corner of a rock. Tasted bright and slightly grim with stoniness at first, stony ferocity of acidity and tannins; then musical movement suddenly amongst the rocks like a brook hidden among boulders in a mountain meadow. The wine/mouth stays a bit ferocious, though it is a pretty, quiet ferocity; not a wine with big body; more like fruit gnarled into tightness by frozen winds. It melds with dinner: roasted yellow potatoes, portobello mushrooms (whole) and yellow onions sprinkled with black pepper, olive oil, rosemary... the roasted/browned onion/mushroom flavors go well with the wine and soften the wine's tannins. Stays a bit short in the mouth but fruit is haunting the severeness like a tease. I like the wine a lot.
Opened the last bottle in (2017?) and it was slender and precise and cold, but lovely; a willow branch in winter above a snowy, frozen streambed.
Shorter note in 2017..... busy.
Nice note, Karen! (The short one, I mean). Very lyric. A picture is worth a thousand words.
originally posted by Jayson Cohen:
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
General apology to all and sundry for misspelling Corton. How comes it to pass that I've escaped public castigation for this oversight?
It’s a tolerant, forgiving community here on Wine Disorder.