

Nick11 wrote: it's almost impossible to have a complete write off these days with the technology at hand (bar hail/ frost etc).
sjw_11 wrote:Nick11 wrote: it's almost impossible to have a complete write off these days with the technology at hand (bar hail/ frost etc).
Or bushfires...
Nick11 wrote: What are you going to drink while all your perfect vintages are still unapproachable? Something from a year like '11.. Why not write off producers or sites instead?
Or instead of writing anything off, jut offer the best options at your disposal instead of saying something negative?
If you can't say anything nice.....
Nick11 wrote:What are you going to drink while all your perfect vintages are still unapproachable?
tarija wrote:Nick11 wrote: What are you going to drink while all your perfect vintages are still unapproachable? Something from a year like '11.. Why not write off producers or sites instead?
Or instead of writing anything off, jut offer the best options at your disposal instead of saying something negative?
If you can't say anything nice.....
Wine is a luxury item, and my money and time are finite resources. I don't have time to taste or read reviews for every single 2011 pinot noir from the eastern states. Almost every pinot noir I've had from 2011 in the eastern states I don't feel has been worth the priced charged.
Also, pinot noir is fickle enough to grow and vinify properly in good vintages, let alone in dog years like 2011. And let's not be too self-righteous, everyone uses generalisations. I'm sure you think that Australian wine is better than Indian wine...that liebfraumilch is inferior to riesling...that Penfolds Bin 28 is worse than Grange. Ad nauseum. At the end of the day, wine is expensive and people have limited resources, and thus have to be critical. We're not drinking freebies here.Nick11 wrote:What are you going to drink while all your perfect vintages are still unapproachable?
Come on, we were discussing Australian pinot noir - there's not that many long-term Australian pinot noirs. This is not nebbiolo or 1st growth Bordeaux. How many Australian pinots are truly unapproachable and/or shut down like Burgundies? Probably zero, to be honest.
Also, there are 20-30 countries aside from Australia that also make fantastic wine, and hundreds of grape varieties out there. Plenty to drink while our non-2011 vintages come around.
In the meantime, please buy up all the 2011 pinot noirs on the shelf, thanks.
Nick11 wrote:Just for some context, what sort of sample size are we looking at with the 2011 Pinot's you have tried?
tarija wrote:Nick11 wrote:Just for some context, what sort of sample size are we looking at with the 2011 Pinot's you have tried?
Around 10-20, with the majority at tastings. Supplement this with vintage reports, and reviews from professional writers and semi-pros/amateurs.
tarija wrote:Nick11 wrote:Just for some context, what sort of sample size are we looking at with the 2011 Pinot's you have tried?
Around 10-20, with the majority at tastings. Supplement this with vintage reports, and reviews from professional writers and semi-pros/amateurs.
Nick11 wrote:I don't want to dwell too much so I leave it at this. If we take Halliday's site as a source given he clearly has the widest coverage of Australian wine, 325 2011 Pinots listed, which lets face it is a conservative figure, you have tried between 3 and 6% of Pinots from the vintage, hardly representative and worse at tastings which are entirely dependent on context of the tasting, think about how many of the great wines of the world wouldn't even be a blip on anyone's radar if their reputation was built on assessments at tastings. How is Biondi Santi going to look after a Banfi with 15% merlot or cabernet blended into it?
Not to mention "profesional writers" etc. the same writers who before the harvest wrote the vintage off as a disaster, and have subsequently back flipped about how lovely all the 11's are they are trying? And who are these writers, the standard and rigour of most Australian writers is par on their good days.
My point being don't you worry about the quality of your opinion, and what backs it up before you form it, and most importantly don't you feel a little guilty telling someone to write off a whole vintage of wines on a paper thin argument? or the producers who thrived in the vintage and went to great extents to put out a great wine only for some poor bloke in a position to buy one saying "no thanks, matey on the net told me 2011 was shithouse" ..
tarija wrote:Your logic makes no sense.