originally posted by mark e:
originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by robert ames:
originally posted by BJ:
I pretty much stopped aging Chablis with premox. Which is sad, 'cause old Chablis is fucking awesome when it's on.
I am pretty sad most producers still oak their premier/GCs somewhat in light of this. That oak can integrate with age...but if you drink at release it's there big time. I wish they'd all just use old oak for everything.
hmmm. . .with louis michel, billaud simon, bernard defaix, fevre domaine, i have never had a prem ox bottle. and that's up to 10 years old.
All of those have had reports of premox but none are domaines I ever cellared. I stopped a long time ago, so I was bitten by Dauvissat and Boudin and really just priced out of Ravenneau (Dauvissat now as well). Picq always worked out for me but maybe I also didn't expect them to age as long so just drank them.
Back in the mid-90s (when you could do such things) I used to hit Chablis every summer and taste with pretty much everyone and then raid the cellars at the Hostellerie des Clos to drink older vintages of Dauvissat and Raveneau. They were some of the best experiences I've ever had with white wine (NB, I was a graduate student at the time and 10-12 year old Raveneau Clos could be had for under $100 US, often well under).
Lucky you did that then. 'Cause now, well, who can afford them. What is odd here in Norway is that though Dauvissat is pretty much unavailable in the retail (Vinmonopolet) market, restaurants have them. The 1er crus I like best, Fôret and Vaillons, are about $110/120 so once in a while . . . But for everyday drinking, we buy a lot of Duplessis (which never gets any love here): petit chablis mostly, but also the 1er crus which cost considerably less than the US.
Yeah, glad I got to do all that. I really haven't been back to Burgundy in a long time. Eric and I went up to visit Mugneret-Gibourg and show off some tijanes at Roulot a few years back, but that's about it. It's all pretty gross now.
Duplessis is really good. I also like Moreau-Naudet in a different style. Picq really scratches my old Dauvissat itch with steely but concentrated wines. Honestly, I don't really miss Dauvissat and Raveneau that much.