Impressions August 2018

originally posted by Michael Lewis:
originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by Pavel Tchichikov:
Very cool selection.

originally posted by VLM:
Impressions August 20181999 Domaine Georges Mugneret-Gibourg Echezeaux
Unfortunately, this is still pretty tight. Has real depth to it, but still needs more time.

the new york hebraic tippling association (copyright ccoad, all rights reserved) issued an executive decision a couple of years back to leave 99 GCs and higher end 1er alone for a while, almost uniformly. Likely to dive into village wines, as a group, sometime in 2019.

As I said, far be it from me to argue with the NY hebrews, but I've had a decent number of 1999s that are more than pleasant, including a beautiful Mugnier Fuées that will be included in the September version of these impressions. I think it is a wine by wine thing at this point. Given the usual generosity of M-G, I was surprised at how hard this was.

Michael, did we ever wonder if it was mildly corked or am I conflating that with something else?

We did wonder about that, several times, but we both eventually agreed that it was not corked.

Yeah, that was my recollection. It'll be interesting to see how the next bottle shows.
 
originally posted by VLM:
There may be as many as three bottlings, a white capsule (this one) a gold capsule (Bessards-Le Méal) and a red capsule which is a blend for the French market.

More like 4. Some years (rare ones), there will be a separate Le Meal, marked by an "M". The blended one I think is what Britain gets as well, and the white capsule is not really white, but a light cream color made of Greffieux-Bessards.

*looks like Ben beat me, but I'll post this anyway to clarify before we keep going on about Hebrews and Shebrews.
 
originally posted by MarkS:
originally posted by VLM:
There may be as many as three bottlings, a white capsule (this one) a gold capsule (Bessards-Le Méal) and a red capsule which is a blend for the French market.

More like 4. Some years (rare ones), there will be a separate Le Meal, marked by an "M". The blended one I think is what Britain gets as well, and the white capsule is not really white, but a light cream color made of Greffieux-Bessards.

*looks like Ben beat me, but I'll post this anyway to clarify before we keep going on about Hebrews and Shebrews.

I've never had the "M", only the other three. It would be fun to put together a dinner around the different cuvées to see if the differentiation holds.
 
Just looked at my CT notes on 1999s drunk from my cellar in the past year and admit I was surprised the few I opened showed well. Bruno Clair’ csj, chevillon cailles, and grivot’s Boudots were all quite attractive.
 
Thanks. I opened an '08 Dominoes from Pavelot two weeks ago and was worried - considering the vintage characteristics - that the tannins were outrunning the fruit. It was better imbibed cool from the fridge after a day or two, FWIW.

Also opened an 09 Grézeaux earlier this year but, shamefully, did not take a note. I'd imagined the Croix Boisée would be slower to evolve, so interesting report here. (Not really germane, but a 2005 Hureau Lisagathe opened last week is still several years from maturity, IMHO, FWIW).

Are you suggesting 'drink up' on the '05 Javernieres, or drink and hold?

Santé.
 
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