originally posted by BJ:
originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by Levi Dalton:
originally posted by BJ:
Levi, I think you're awesome, but that's ridiculous. This had nothing to do with an over the hill wine, it had to do with a badly flawed wine. I frankly drink country wines in this age range all the time and they are often great. I merely mentioned the last flawed bottle I had. I could have just as easily mentioned something just released. It is a known problem, on par with overoaking and premox - do you not experience it?
"The thing I find most alarming is that producers who typically have not had brett issues are starting to show up with them - more mainline low volume producers" is what you wrote, and then you went on to cite a 13 year old bottle of Chave Côtes-du-Rhône. Do you have any other examples from Chave that you would like to put forward to support the conclusion that you shared publicly? Please cite them, if so.
Perhaps you are unaware that brett can develop in a bottle
over time. Or that shipping and storage conditions can play in a role in the development of brett in a bottle.
Basically, you waited too long to open the bottle, as is your perogative. But you are blaming the producer for this decision on your part, which is lame of you.
Yeah, but for brett to develop in the bottle it has to be there in the first place which means there was an issue in the cellar, if you find brett to be an issue.
Yeah, sorry Levi, I'm not buying it. Perhaps I shouldn't have called out Chave based on one vintage of one cuvee (can't afford "real Chave" anyway), but there's no need to patronize. Yes, of course I know that flaws can show up over time, and if a wine sees heat or sits in a refrigerator or stands up for a while can all lead to problems of all sorts. But I can equally tell you that there are certain producers I have never experienced these issues with, there are producers I frequently experience them with, and there are producers I used to never experience them with, but now do. BTW, these bottles showed no signs of problems with the cork.
To provide a few examples particular to Beaujolais, some producers I would bet good money on that I could grab an old bottle and not experience brett/VA type flaws, even with shaky provenance:
Roilette
Brun
Chermette
Thivin
Chanrion
Tete
Desvignes
Some examples of producers I would expect to see flaws in and thus do not purchase:
Coquelet
Charly Thevenet
Metras
Pacalet
Michel Guignier
Some producers that formerly would be in the first category but at some point started to have problems:
Marcel or Matthieu Lapierre (first flawed bottle in 08)
JP Thevenet
George Descombes
Believe me, those last three are beloved producers for me. I visited Marcel Lapierre multiple times and sadly spent a decent part of an afternoon with him several months before he died. I have tasted with Jean Paul Thevenet, he is a splendid guy. I am guessing the changes have to do with generational changes.
So Chave is safe from the wolf pack but watch out everyone else.