Slow-o for 3 hours prior to dinner. Bitter cherry, cola and a hint of fizziness. Promising but clearly needs to unfold.
Fast forward 3 hours later .... hold on a minute! Where have I tasted this flavor profile before? Hmmmm.... Les Beaux Monts ? Yes, that's it!
Mellowed out a bit and now showing super attractive cherry fruit with sublimely elegant tartness that makes for mouth-watering anticipation. The mid-palate doesn't disappoint .... the story continues to unfold with cola, anise and very subtle hints of pine. Quite exotic character for a California pinot noir. Dusty tannins caress. Big flavor without weight. Just what one wants in a pinot noir.
I believe that this is made using some percentage of whole clusters. Superb framework for this high quality effort.
Finished up the 2010 Albert Morot Beaune Toussaints next to this. One of the very few times that I havd enjoyed a Sonoma Coast Pinot Noir more than a bottling from the Cote d'Or !
Bravo to Messrs Web Marquez, Anthony Filiberti and Dave Low. These gents are hitting all the right notes :)
Paired perfectly with grilled tuna, broccoli salad and roasted potatoes.
I have got to get more of this stuff ...
Sunday, July 30, 2017
1996 Produttori del Barbaresco Riserva Montefico
Have been enjoying relatively older vintages of Produttori del Barbaresco Riserva Cru's from 1996, 1997 and 2001.
Double decanted back into clean bottle for dinner later foday. I don't have much experience with Montefico cru, but based on this bottle, count me as a fan...
Underscoring the adage, "there are no great wines, only great bottles "... this one is at a beautiful peak right now... gorgeous perfumed florals leaped from the bottle on pulling the cork. Completely irresistible fruit with that inner sweetness that we all look for. Tannins have melted into a lovely lithe framework.... kaleidoscopic, yet very elegant, notes of balsam, truffles, sous bois. Oh yes, this is a good one :)
here are interesting notes from John Gilman on Montefico cru published in 2009...
"...my mind, the Montefico takes third place in the hierarchy of the very best crus at the Produttori, for after the Asili and the Rabajà, this has consistently been the most complete and complex of the single vineyard bottlings that I have tasted from this fine winery. As I noted above, most commentators on Piemonte wines would rank Montestefano just a bit ahead of Montefico (though Montefico’s reputation is also excellent), but based on the breadth of these tastings I attended in preparation for this article, I have to give the slight nod to Montefico for its superb elegance and complexity. While Montefico also lies along the Neive border, just a few hundred kilometers to the north of Montestefano, Montefico is the quintessentially elegant Barbaresco cru, with more perfume and a tad more breed than its powerful neighbor to the south. Across the border in Neive from Montefico lies the superb cru of Gallina. As noted above, at one time this beautiful vineyard was owned in its entirety by Domizio Cavazza, founder of the oenological school at Alba and widely regarded as the “Father of Barbaresco”.
Like Montestefano, the vast majority of Montefico’s vines enjoy a direct, southerly exposure. But the exposure is a bit more southeasterly on the western end of the vineyard, and the hillside starts to swing around towards a southwesterly exposition as the vineyard nears the border with Neive. The ridge that houses Montefico is a bit less tall than Montestefano’s hill, with its peak elevation at 250 meters above sea level. The Produttori has only made a Montefico cru since 1982, when two cousins from the Rocca family decided to join up with the cooperative and brought along their fine holdings in this vineyard. This makes the Produttori’s Montefico one of the most limited of their cru bottlings, as annual production in a high quality vintage is only five hundred (twelve bottle) cases of this lovely wine. Like Montestefano, Montefico tends to deliver a wine of beautiful fruit tones, which start out quite black fruity in the wines youth, but which can pick up some red fruity tones in certain vintages as it ages. It often delivers the finest soil transparency of any of the crus in the Produttori’s lineup (outside of Asili), and this is often synthesized with beautiful notes of truffles, porcini, tobacco and autumnal notes. It is a beautifully poised and refined Barbaresco cru, and one of the great Piemonte vineyards. Montefico can often be so superbly balanced when it is young that it gives off the impression of early drinkability, but to my mind it needs every bit as much time as Montestefano to really blossom, and is a very long-lived cru as well...."
2010 Domaine Albert Morot Beaune Toussaints
Slow-o in bottle for a few hours before dinner. Shy nose at first, slowly opening up with subtle spice notes.
Pleasing minerally red cherry with a sweetness to the tannins (compliments of the beautiful 2010 vintage), accompanied by a nice touch of sous bois.
Gaining in presence with dinner, with more tartness coming to fore. Paired nicely with Poulet Dijon, broccoli - pear salad, risotto, and artichoke salad.
Not the last word in complexity at this stage, but definitely worth a try now. Domaine Albert Morot has always provided great value in 1er Cru Burgundy.
Pleasing minerally red cherry with a sweetness to the tannins (compliments of the beautiful 2010 vintage), accompanied by a nice touch of sous bois.
Gaining in presence with dinner, with more tartness coming to fore. Paired nicely with Poulet Dijon, broccoli - pear salad, risotto, and artichoke salad.
Not the last word in complexity at this stage, but definitely worth a try now. Domaine Albert Morot has always provided great value in 1er Cru Burgundy.
Saturday, July 15, 2017
1996 Produttori del Barbaresco Riserva Rio Sordo
Double-decanted back into clean bottle. Minimal very fine grained sediment. Aerated in decanter for a couple of hours.
Irresistible floral nose right out of the gate. This could he mistaken for a fine Premier Cru Burgundy in a blind tasting, except that the tell-tale balsamic and truffle notes on the finish give it away as Piemonte.
Beautiful tertiary development. There is nothing quite like the deliciously sweet tannins of a great older Barbaresco. Impressive balance between fruit and acidity make it incredibly food friendly. Paired with calamari first couse followed by griiled mahi mahi and fresh crab and potato "dressing".
For me, the 1996 vintage in Barbaresco has achieved the potential that the 1996 vintage for Red Burgundy never quite lived up to...
Irresistible floral nose right out of the gate. This could he mistaken for a fine Premier Cru Burgundy in a blind tasting, except that the tell-tale balsamic and truffle notes on the finish give it away as Piemonte.
Beautiful tertiary development. There is nothing quite like the deliciously sweet tannins of a great older Barbaresco. Impressive balance between fruit and acidity make it incredibly food friendly. Paired with calamari first couse followed by griiled mahi mahi and fresh crab and potato "dressing".
For me, the 1996 vintage in Barbaresco has achieved the potential that the 1996 vintage for Red Burgundy never quite lived up to...
Saturday, July 8, 2017
2009 Thomas Pinot Noir Dundee Hills
Ready to go right out of gate with an intriguingly elegant floral nose. Slow o'd in bottle for a couple of hours before dinner. This 2009 vintage has entered prime drinking window.
Strikingly beautiful Balaton cherry fruit with tartness that has mellowed perfectly with noteworthy balance. Delcious complexity on the finish with this amazing nutmeg, allspice, sous bois thing that takes the experience to another level for new world pinot noir.
Paired perfectly with Ahi tuna poke followed by grilled double cut bone-in pork chop, grilled asparagus spears, mashed potatoes
My understanding is that Dundee Hills is principally volcanic terroir (Jory soils?), however I think that John Thomas' vineyard is situated on sedimentary Willakenzie soil. Perhaps someone with more in depth local knowledge of geography and geology can elucidate.
In any case, I am very happy to have had the chance to enjoy some of this amazing juice produced by an icon of Oregon winemaking. Would love to visit Willamette Valley wine country some day. (Perhaps this fall !)
Strikingly beautiful Balaton cherry fruit with tartness that has mellowed perfectly with noteworthy balance. Delcious complexity on the finish with this amazing nutmeg, allspice, sous bois thing that takes the experience to another level for new world pinot noir.
Paired perfectly with Ahi tuna poke followed by grilled double cut bone-in pork chop, grilled asparagus spears, mashed potatoes
My understanding is that Dundee Hills is principally volcanic terroir (Jory soils?), however I think that John Thomas' vineyard is situated on sedimentary Willakenzie soil. Perhaps someone with more in depth local knowledge of geography and geology can elucidate.
In any case, I am very happy to have had the chance to enjoy some of this amazing juice produced by an icon of Oregon winemaking. Would love to visit Willamette Valley wine country some day. (Perhaps this fall !)
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