Florida Jim
Florida Jim
Josh,originally posted by Josh Fontaine:
All this seems very mainstream typical "good" Chablis.
What about Beru, Pico, Enclos ?
I’d like to learn about them - what are your impressions/thoughts?
Best, jim
Josh,originally posted by Josh Fontaine:
All this seems very mainstream typical "good" Chablis.
What about Beru, Pico, Enclos ?
originally posted by Josh Fontaine:
All this seems very mainstream typical "good" Chablis.
What about Beru, Pico, Enclos ?
originally posted by Jim Hanlon:
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
I've had very good results with Dauvissat. I'm looking around for a substitute only because the pricing has really become intolerable.
I recommend Laurent Tribut for a Dauvissat-like approach. They're cousins, but that of course doesn't necessarily translate to the glass. In this instance, I think it does. Tribut doesn't have the same terroirs as Dauvissat, but still makes very nice wines.
originally posted by BJ:
I am going to elicit a big chuckle here, but I just bought my semi-regular case of village Chablis from Trader Joe's. $14.99 and produced by JM Brocard, single vineyard of middle aged vines, indigenous yeasts. Shows some breeding and pride. For the price, really hard to beat in the Cheap Crap category.
originally posted by Christian Miller (CMM):
originally posted by BJ:
I am going to elicit a big chuckle here, but I just bought my semi-regular case of village Chablis from Trader Joe's. $14.99 and produced by JM Brocard, single vineyard of middle aged vines, indigenous yeasts. Shows some breeding and pride. For the price, really hard to beat in the Cheap Crap category.
I'm a fan of Brocard's own bottlings, and I had the TJ's version in the previous vintage. I found it a little thinner and sort of "dampened down", but it does deliver an authentic Chablis experience at a very fair price. For TJ shoppers: this year's Tavel selection was really good. They also had an interesting, slightly rustic old school Ribera del Duero - Condado de Oriza (Pago del Rey) 2015, not sure if that is still in stock.
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
If I want a cheap white Burgundy with dinner, there’s always Jadot Macon for $12.
originally posted by BJ:
Last vintage of the TJ Brocard (it is Brocard btw) was the '17, so sounds like not as good recently.
If I could get Picq in this town for $20, I'd not be shopping at TJs.
I will have to check out the Jadot. Even Macon these days seems to be the $20s.
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
Of Fevre, I recall liking the Vaulorent very much. But I stopped buying Fevre several years before these vintages. Scary about the natural corks, especially for the GCs. I'd imagine these would warrant the most reliable closures.
The Vaulorent went to Diam in 2007, hence the consistent set of good bottles there...originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
Of Fevre, I recall liking the Vaulorent very much. But I stopped buying Fevre several years before these vintages. Scary about the natural corks, especially for the GCs. I'd imagine these would warrant the most reliable closures.
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
originally posted by BJ:
Last vintage of the TJ Brocard (it is Brocard btw) was the '17, so sounds like not as good recently.
If I could get Picq in this town for $20, I'd not be shopping at TJs.
I will have to check out the Jadot. Even Macon these days seems to be the $20s.
The '18 is to be had for about $20 from a couple of stores on the right coast. Maybe Greg at Envoyer could begin bringing Picq in at reasonable prices next to the Pacific.
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
originally posted by Christian Miller (CMM):
originally posted by BJ:
I am going to elicit a big chuckle here, but I just bought my semi-regular case of village Chablis from Trader Joe's. $14.99 and produced by JM Brocard, single vineyard of middle aged vines, indigenous yeasts. Shows some breeding and pride. For the price, really hard to beat in the Cheap Crap category.
I'm a fan of Brocard's own bottlings, and I had the TJ's version in the previous vintage. I found it a little thinner and sort of "dampened down", but it does deliver an authentic Chablis experience at a very fair price. For TJ shoppers: this year's Tavel selection was really good. They also had an interesting, slightly rustic old school Ribera del Duero - Condado de Oriza (Pago del Rey) 2015, not sure if that is still in stock.
I’ll check out the Tavel. Favorites?
originally posted by VLM:
Picq has a national importer that does business in CA. I like the Picq's, I wouldn't want to disrupt their business by buying grey market and I'm willing to pay a little extra for provenance and jobs*. Wines cost what they cost. At the level of Picq no one is gouging it's the price of a business that buys and markets the wines every year and builds that market for the producer so they can pay their bills.
That being said, I've got no issue with Greg and bought wine from him when I lived in Southern CA.
* I have friends that work for Vintage 59, the importer.
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
originally posted by VLM:
Picq has a national importer that does business in CA. I like the Picq's, I wouldn't want to disrupt their business by buying grey market and I'm willing to pay a little extra for provenance and jobs*. Wines cost what they cost. At the level of Picq no one is gouging it's the price of a business that buys and markets the wines every year and builds that market for the producer so they can pay their bills.
That being said, I've got no issue with Greg and bought wine from him when I lived in Southern CA.
* I have friends that work for Vintage 59, the importer.
You have a sophisticated understanding of market mechanisms and dynamics that I'm essentially blind to. I didn't mean to suggest anything improper; Vintage 59 has a nice reputation and I have no quarrel with them. I was responding spontaneously to a quick glance on Winesearcher at the CA retailers offering Picq.
Is $20 pricing in the east the product of gray market trade?