Sunday, February 22, 2009

Variety is the spice of life...

Sitting here, in my living room, watching the end of the Northern Trust Open on TV, enjoying a bottle of Billecart-Salmon Brut NV (really nice stuff here, GDA, light toast and brioche, though a touch higher dosage(?) than I usually like) The 2006 Pahlmeyer Chardonnay is classic... mineral, leesy, buttered popcorn, toasted almonds, and loads of ripe apples. The 1999 Bollinger Grand Année is delicious... simply outstanding stuff. Vanilla, toasted hazelnuts, Golden Delecious Apples, ginger and exotic spices with citrus and a rich, mineral finish. A fabulous Champagne with years ahead of it. The 1993 Ampeau Volnay-Santenots was sampled from some 14 bottles, with severe variation between all of them. At worst, corked (quite a few), at best, a beautiful earth and barnyard cherry compote. Good, but ready to go. The 1998 Chateau Petite-Village was simply beautiful - tasted 16 bottles, with very little variation (2 corked). A very elegant Pomerol from this very under-appreciated Right-bank vintage. Cedar, dark chocolate, burnt cocoa powder, blackberry, wild red currant and black cherry. A nice, elegant finish. The 1989 Chateau Petite-Village was tasted from 6 magnums (1 corked) and 4 750ml bottles. There was some variation between the two, but not appreciable. Some brett on these, but the beautiful wet underbrush and black and red mixed berry fruit pushed it aside fairly quickly. Perfectly mature - these are not going to get any better, but the structure is still there to maintain for quite a while. The 1977 Dows Port en Magnum was simply beautiful... almonds, candied plums, cedar and molassas... a lovely, very long finish... still a baby, but nice to drink now! A lovely evening...

Had a Tiger beer this afternoon and boy was it good... lovely, light amber... had it in a spot I never would have thought would have had something like this. Great stuff.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Brilliance...

Sorry for the long delay in posts... last night had a marvelous selection of wines from brothers Jean & Pierre Trimbach. When I hear the name "Trimbach", my ears perk up, and I start salivating... the wines are sheer brilliance. The 2006 Pinot Blanc is refreshing, floral, with a bit of weight and moderately intense mineral notes. The 2001 Cuvee Frederic Emile Riesling is perfection... incredible minerality - sharp and intense, with a classic bone-dry Riesling profile - petrol, flowers, unripe stone fruit, citrus (hello, lime!) and ginger spice. I had this wine a few months ago and it was almost too intense, but it has now just begun to open. Bravo... this is what Riesling is all about. Clos Ste Hune good? Maybe not, but at 1/3 the price, an incredible value. Though enjoyable now, this really needs at least another 2-5 years to come around. The 2001 Pinot Gris Reserve Personelle was outstanding, but not stunning like the CFE. A bit riper with more nectarine, apricot and Asian spice - intense mineral notes as well, and bone dry. Great wine. The 2001 Cuvee des Seigneurs de Ribeaupierre Gewurztraminer is pure... that's the only way I can describe it. Ripe? Yes... but unlike so many others, this is very dry and not overdone. Beautiful lychee, stone and citrus with exotic spices oozing from the glass. A beauty and one of the great dry Gewurz in the world. The 2002 Vendange Tardive Gewurztraminer was much more floral, explosive and stony than the CSR and was a great way to end the meal - a lychee bomb! Awesome stuff... I had a bottle of 2000 Hors Choix (SGN) Gewurz that I kept open for almost a month once... amazing wines, and great to see Jean again...