Wine Impressions 9-14-18

Florida Jim

Florida Jim
Wine impressions - 9-14-18

Bubbles:
N/V H. Goutorbe, Champagne Rose Brut - stronger flavors than expected in an overall well balanced and steady wine. Not bad . . .

Whites:
2016 Amapola Creek, Chardonnay - wonderful nose, superb fruit, some nice layers but the French oak is a bit too much for me on the finish. For those who are not as finicky as I, this is quite a wine. Puligny-esque and suave.
(Aside: I tasted this at the winery on the day they were bringing in current vintage of Chard - and the new fruit was stellar. If you like the style, 2018 Chard from this house should be splendid.)
2017 Cowan Cellars, Ribolla Gialla - needs time to open in air and then blossoms into something Friulian and lovely. This will develop over several years.
2014 Edmunds St. John, Heart of Gold - I usually drink these within days of arrival so it’s nice to try one with age - hasn’t lost a step - bright, pure, lively and delicious.
2016 Belluard, Gringet Les Alpes - Savoie wine with spice, life and something lurking; young but lively and maybe, complexity playing just at the edge of perception. Time should be good for this.
2014 Ladd Cellars, Chardonnay Cuvée Voile - part of this wine is made “under the veil” much like Sherry and then blended into the direct press juice. Initially, it’s quite angular with lemon rind in charge - as it opens the depth and character of the wine become clearer and the complexity shows - no oak anywhere, crystalline fruit, immense energy, endless finish. One of the very best new world chardonnays I have tasted and has years to develop in the cellar. Extraordinary wine!

Reds:
2015 and 2005 Amapola Creek, Cabernet Sauvignon - Sonoma Cab from Dick Arrowood; both clearly from the same house; the ‘05 has lost its wood signature and is relatively complex with some herbal tones over focused cab fruit, a bit disjointed overall but a nice drop. The ‘15 is much more of a piece but also shows more oak so its not as distinctive as the older wine. Neither is my cup of juice but both are well made in the style and, based on the older wine losing its oak notes, perhaps there is more development in store for the more recent vintage - that and the fact that the vines are ten years older gives promise.
2017 Dirty and Rowdy, Unfamiliar Rouge - open several days but recorked and in the cooler; a little aromatic funk blows off and, from then on, clear and lightly rustic, Mourvèdre smells and flavors with balance and sustain. May all Hardy’s “difficult vintages” be so lucky. Overachieves at the price point. SRP $23.
(Aside: D and I finished what remained of that bottle and decided to open another. Fresh, sans funk and every bit the same wine. Makes me wonder if this will last longer than anticipated. Either way, I’ve got to get another case.)
2009 Vieux Telegraph, CdP - a complete wine at the pretty end of the spectrum - no brooding or heaviness, just pure, nuanced CdP with perfect balance and plenty of there, there. A treasure.
2017 Harrington, Syrah McEvoy Ranch - remarkable wine; complete, lots of olive and lifted tones, good structure and such complexity at such a young age - my goodness! As impressive a young CA red wine as I have had in many years.
1996 Montille, Pommard Les Grands Epenots - laser like focus but too many holes right now; needs time.
1996 Dom. Prieure Roch, Vosne Romanee Les Suchots - fully resolved, lighter weight and delightful. Of a piece and worth spending some time with.
1996 Dom. Laurent, Bonnes Mares - it takes some effort to eviscerate and dry out Bonnes Mares with oak but Laurent achieves it here. It’s not completely lacking in character but the maladies that accompany too much wood are present and detract from the overall delivery. A wine that makes me wonder what could have been.
2016 Birichino, Cinsault Bechthold Vineyard - Rhône style Beaujolais, bright, crisp, lightweight but intense and wonderful with puttanesca. Very old Cinsault turns out to be very good.
2008 Ladd Cellars, Pinot Noir Sonoma Coast - practically a barrel sample; young, unevolved, undeveloped but with everything it needs to be more.
N/V Birichino, Grenache Hommage a Georges Besson (500ml) - 2012, 2013 and 2014 select clusters that are from own-rooted vines, made soldera style and appassimento, then fermented whole cluster and macerated post-fermentation for 40 days. Nothing here says Grenache; it’s all about deep fruit and savory and structured length. This is so very young but everything that is here points toward a long life with incremental development over the years. Crazy good!

Best, jim
 
"1996 Dom. Laurent, Bonnes Mares - it takes some effort to eviscerate and dry out Bonnes Mares with oak but Laurent achieves it here. It’s not completely lacking in character but the maladies that accompany too much wood are present and detract from the overall delivery. A wine that makes me wonder what could have been."

how much potentially great wine has this man murdered over the years? Before I knew much about his practices I bought two bottles of a Vosne Romanee lieu dit -- that should have been delightful if never expected to be profound. Of course they were Laurent Oak Bombs. Dried out and charmless.
 
originally posted by Tristan Welles:
"1996 Dom. Laurent, Bonnes Mares - it takes some effort to eviscerate and dry out Bonnes Mares with oak but Laurent achieves it here. It’s not completely lacking in character but the maladies that accompany too much wood are present and detract from the overall delivery. A wine that makes me wonder what could have been."

how much potentially great wine has this man murdered over the years? Before I knew much about his practices I bought two bottles of a Vosne Romanee lieu dit -- that should have been delightful if never expected to be profound. Of course they were Laurent Oak Bombs. Dried out and charmless.

in hindsight of course, no surprise.

the wine world went way too far down this deadend road.

may we be spared others.

and may we crack the next nut sooner.
 
What astonishes me is that Laurent has strong credentials in the Le Baratin corner of the natural wine world, but the oak is indeed enough to make anyone run for the hills.
 
That's news to me that Laurent is big in Le Baratin (when I was there, they were pushing Pacalet), but the way Laurent makes wine now is very different from the way he did it in 1996, and even then the oak offenses were mainly limited to the grand crus that he inexplicably thought needed the 200% magic barrel treatment. If you try, say, the Vaucrains or LSG from the same period (acquired from Chevillon), you will be in for a treat.
 
The Laurent barrels were the best barrels I've ever seen in my life. No wonder he became infatuated with using them. Syvie Esmonin also uses them for her wines.

I've had really good bottles of Laurent over the years, but also others that are as Jim described. Laurent is mostly grey market, so I think many of the wines weren't handled well.

That Birichino Cinsault sounds really cool.

Did you ever have that sous voile chardonnay that Kevin Kelley did at Salinia? Also, any idea what ever happened to him? Seems to have fallen off my radar.
 
Salina is MIA in my world and I work right across the street.
I do remember that Chard but not clearly. This Ladd Cellars was remarkable.
Best, jim
 
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
That's news to me that Laurent is big in Le Baratin (when I was there, they were pushing Pacalet)

is this like a joke about arriving in hell and having to choose between two eternal punishments?
 
originally posted by VLM:
The Laurent barrels were the best barrels I've ever seen in my life. No wonder he became infatuated with using them. Syvie Esmonin also uses them for her wines.

I am working my way (slowly) through a small stash of back vintages of michel esmonin, and as nice as they are they would have aged better with less oak. Or different oak. Or whatever.
 
originally posted by Christian Miller (CMM):
originally posted by VLM:
The Laurent barrels were the best barrels I've ever seen in my life.
By what criteria? Not about to argue, just genuinely curious.

The thickness of the staves, the grain of the wood even for the butts. The only barrels I've seen that struck me as of the same quality are the ones that the Foucaults use(d) for Bourg.
 
originally posted by Pavel Tchichikov:
originally posted by VLM:
The Laurent barrels were the best barrels I've ever seen in my life. No wonder he became infatuated with using them. Syvie Esmonin also uses them for her wines.

I am working my way (slowly) through a small stash of back vintages of michel esmonin, and as nice as they are they would have aged better with less oak. Or different oak. Or whatever.
The Laurent barrels didn't come until way after the Michel Esmonin domaine became Sylvie
 
originally posted by Florida Jim:
Wine Impressions 9-14-18Wine impressions - 9-14-18

2014 Edmunds St. John, Heart of Gold - I usually drink these within days of arrival so it’s nice to try one with age - hasn’t lost a step - bright, pure, lively and delicious.

Just cracked my last bottle of this last night. Really just bloody brilliant. If anything it seems to have shed a touch of weight since release, and was more graceful for it.
 
A lot of the Laurent issues eventually turn out to be reduction rather than oak. The real difficulty is that I've had some of the best and worst bottles of my life from here, very often from the same case.
 
Tom, I also have had some wonderful experiences from Laurent but haven't had enough samplings for a trend to be observable.

. . . . Pete
 
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