Jayson Cohen
Jayson Cohen
originally posted by MLipton:
originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by MLipton:
originally posted by Jayson Cohen:
Seems like a nonlinear problem. The pundits, e.g., claimed that many 1966, 1970, and 1975 Bordeaux had dried out, the tannins having outlasted and ultimately overwhelmed the fruit. That was wrong.
I’ve had old Barolo that seemed dried out and fruitless, and then boom, a few hours after a careful decant, there’s the fruit.
So I’m very, very skeptical when for certain wines someone says the fruit has dried out.
This. I've had great luck buying those "tired" vintages on the secondary market ('88 Burgundy, '66 Bdx) and in almost all cases they've benefited from more time in the cellar. Granted, one has to appreciate the charm of older wine, but it certainly rewards the patient.
Mark Lipton
If you can turn the other way on the politics, the de Montille 1988s are fantastic.
I had some of their '88s in the past (Champans IIRC) but have now drunk them all up. Not buying any new Montille (or Montevertine, sadly) for the reasons you cite.
Mark Lipton
I thought Etienne had publicly repudiated his father’s comments/conduct on 9/11, which were repulsive. Should we burden the son with the sins of his (now deceased) father?