Florida Jim
Florida Jim
Impressions:
2015 Vincent Girardin, Saint-Aubin en Remilly:
Adequate bot no more and a tad oaky.
2018 Clos Cibonne, Tibouren Rose:
The regular version but there is little “regular” about it. Fine, lacy, bright and suave. A dream of summer in thee glass.
2013 Raveneau, Chablis Montee de Tonnerre:
Precise balance and a beautiful expression of the vineyard. What I hope for when someone opens Raveneau.
1988 Lytton Springs, Zinfandel Lytton Springs:
Claret-like but fading. Still pleasant but more for Hommage than delight.
2005 Bruno Clavelier, Les Beaux-Monts:
Vosne 1er needn’t get much better; youthful but full of energy and spice.
2010 Beaucastel, CdP:
Not my favorite AOC but this was sound and representative.
2019 Jadot, Beaujolais Villages:
Excellent value and quite pretty. Happy wine.
2017 Clos Cibonne, Tibouren Cuvée Speciale (red):
Aside from the brett, a delightful, mid-weight and complex wine that holds the interest and is good with dinner.
2018 Vajra, Nebbiolo; Dolcetto; Barbera:
Perfectly sound wines that are just not very interesting.
2018 Vajra, Rosso:
Here we go; bright, lively, tangy and layered; so much better than any of the foregoing.
2016 Fillaboa, Albariño Monte Alto:
Serious wine that needs decanter time or further aging. Concentrated with intense spice and bracing acidity. Yum.
2017 Louis Michel, Chablis:
Lovely wine, good structure and character and maybe a touch more going on than the next wine. Screwcap.
2018 Louis Michel, Chablis:
See above.
2018 Pierre Richard, Poulsard Jura:
Pale red-cinnamon, light but intense, complex, dry, slightly sauvage; happy to drink this anytime.
2017 Tornatore, Etna Bianco:
All Carricante and while focused and structured, bigger than expected. Pretty darn good.
2017 Tornatore, Etna Rosso:
All Norello Mascalese and very dry - tannic grip is what it does best but it does a few other things that I enjoy so, while not something I’ll drink much of, good with the proper food.
2011 Colpetrone, Sagrantino:
Tried a bottle, bought a case (about $20/bottle). Delicious fruit, tamed tannins, good balance and brought back our visit to Umbria in a very nice way. Real good.
2019 Vincent, Pinot Blanc:
(Small producer in OR) Clear, clean wine with a bit more volume than expected. Good with almost anything and quite pleasing.
2018 Vincent, Pinot Noir Ribbon Ridge:
This is a yearly buy for me. About $25/bottle on pre-release and certainly the best Pinot at that price I know about. Deep, pure, satin textured but plenty of structure. Will age very well but tastes great now.
2018 Vincent, Pinot Noir, Armstrong Vnyd.:
Takes the Ribbon Ridge bottling to the next level and adds more finesse. Years to go but good now with decanter time.
Diane and I ran out of our own wines earlier in the year but got a shipment recently. All notes below are for Cowan Cellars wines:
2011 Isa:
Skin-fermented SB with 11 months in barrel; tangerine skin and aromas akin to old claret; brothy, underripe pear, mint and some earth tones all fairly well integrated and good length. Still a little young but showing what orange wine can be with age. D’s favorite,
2012 Isa:
Same cepage but 27 months in barrel; similar to the above but with more finesse and truly of whole cloth. A glass 24 hours after opening was stellar. I am very pleased with this.
2011 Syrah, Bennett Valley:
Intense, feral, balanced and showing secondary development. All I could ask at this showing.
2012 Syrah, Bennett Valley:
Thinner than the foregoing and less precise. However, a glass the next day was more impressive.
2015 Syrah, Bennett Valley:
A baby but perfect balance and nice complexity. Great future.
2016 Syrah, BV:
A big, goofy puppy that won’t stay off the furniture. Much more CA in style.
2017 Syrah, BV:
Whoa. I expected this to be way too young but it is savory, complex and powerful. Lots of upside.
2012 Pinot Noir, Anderson Valley:
Really lovely; bottle age has this heading in the light but intense direction with some development. Quite good.
2013 Pinot, AV:
Needs time; good stuffing but pretty firm.
2014 Pinot, AV:
Odd showing; somewhat overripe to my taste and fairly sweet. Tonight I’ll try another glass and see if a day open changes it.
Far better on day two but I doubt this will ever be my fav.
2018 Ribolla Gialla:
Fresh fruit, spot on acids, excellent length; yum.
2012 Ribolla Gialla:
Skin-fermented; orange zest, hay, and tangerine juice; another orange wine that makes me happy.
Best, Jim
2015 Vincent Girardin, Saint-Aubin en Remilly:
Adequate bot no more and a tad oaky.
2018 Clos Cibonne, Tibouren Rose:
The regular version but there is little “regular” about it. Fine, lacy, bright and suave. A dream of summer in thee glass.
2013 Raveneau, Chablis Montee de Tonnerre:
Precise balance and a beautiful expression of the vineyard. What I hope for when someone opens Raveneau.
1988 Lytton Springs, Zinfandel Lytton Springs:
Claret-like but fading. Still pleasant but more for Hommage than delight.
2005 Bruno Clavelier, Les Beaux-Monts:
Vosne 1er needn’t get much better; youthful but full of energy and spice.
2010 Beaucastel, CdP:
Not my favorite AOC but this was sound and representative.
2019 Jadot, Beaujolais Villages:
Excellent value and quite pretty. Happy wine.
2017 Clos Cibonne, Tibouren Cuvée Speciale (red):
Aside from the brett, a delightful, mid-weight and complex wine that holds the interest and is good with dinner.
2018 Vajra, Nebbiolo; Dolcetto; Barbera:
Perfectly sound wines that are just not very interesting.
2018 Vajra, Rosso:
Here we go; bright, lively, tangy and layered; so much better than any of the foregoing.
2016 Fillaboa, Albariño Monte Alto:
Serious wine that needs decanter time or further aging. Concentrated with intense spice and bracing acidity. Yum.
2017 Louis Michel, Chablis:
Lovely wine, good structure and character and maybe a touch more going on than the next wine. Screwcap.
2018 Louis Michel, Chablis:
See above.
2018 Pierre Richard, Poulsard Jura:
Pale red-cinnamon, light but intense, complex, dry, slightly sauvage; happy to drink this anytime.
2017 Tornatore, Etna Bianco:
All Carricante and while focused and structured, bigger than expected. Pretty darn good.
2017 Tornatore, Etna Rosso:
All Norello Mascalese and very dry - tannic grip is what it does best but it does a few other things that I enjoy so, while not something I’ll drink much of, good with the proper food.
2011 Colpetrone, Sagrantino:
Tried a bottle, bought a case (about $20/bottle). Delicious fruit, tamed tannins, good balance and brought back our visit to Umbria in a very nice way. Real good.
2019 Vincent, Pinot Blanc:
(Small producer in OR) Clear, clean wine with a bit more volume than expected. Good with almost anything and quite pleasing.
2018 Vincent, Pinot Noir Ribbon Ridge:
This is a yearly buy for me. About $25/bottle on pre-release and certainly the best Pinot at that price I know about. Deep, pure, satin textured but plenty of structure. Will age very well but tastes great now.
2018 Vincent, Pinot Noir, Armstrong Vnyd.:
Takes the Ribbon Ridge bottling to the next level and adds more finesse. Years to go but good now with decanter time.
Diane and I ran out of our own wines earlier in the year but got a shipment recently. All notes below are for Cowan Cellars wines:
2011 Isa:
Skin-fermented SB with 11 months in barrel; tangerine skin and aromas akin to old claret; brothy, underripe pear, mint and some earth tones all fairly well integrated and good length. Still a little young but showing what orange wine can be with age. D’s favorite,
2012 Isa:
Same cepage but 27 months in barrel; similar to the above but with more finesse and truly of whole cloth. A glass 24 hours after opening was stellar. I am very pleased with this.
2011 Syrah, Bennett Valley:
Intense, feral, balanced and showing secondary development. All I could ask at this showing.
2012 Syrah, Bennett Valley:
Thinner than the foregoing and less precise. However, a glass the next day was more impressive.
2015 Syrah, Bennett Valley:
A baby but perfect balance and nice complexity. Great future.
2016 Syrah, BV:
A big, goofy puppy that won’t stay off the furniture. Much more CA in style.
2017 Syrah, BV:
Whoa. I expected this to be way too young but it is savory, complex and powerful. Lots of upside.
2012 Pinot Noir, Anderson Valley:
Really lovely; bottle age has this heading in the light but intense direction with some development. Quite good.
2013 Pinot, AV:
Needs time; good stuffing but pretty firm.
2014 Pinot, AV:
Odd showing; somewhat overripe to my taste and fairly sweet. Tonight I’ll try another glass and see if a day open changes it.
Far better on day two but I doubt this will ever be my fav.
2018 Ribolla Gialla:
Fresh fruit, spot on acids, excellent length; yum.
2012 Ribolla Gialla:
Skin-fermented; orange zest, hay, and tangerine juice; another orange wine that makes me happy.
Best, Jim