WOTY Tasting
WOTY Tasting
Len (Monghead) proposed this dinner as a last hurrah for 2013 asking us to bring wines we felt were worthy of Wine of the Year (WOTY).
Oysters with cabernet sauvignon vinegar pearls and eschallot
1990 Salon Blanc de Blancs
1992 Dom Perignon
Seared cobia, black sesame, mushroom milk, puffed rice with pickled vegetables and elk
1998 William Fevre Les Clos, Chablis Grand Cru
2008 William Fevre Les Clos, Chablis Grand Cru
Smoked duck, broccoli, cuttlefish, duck cheese and umeboshi
2009 Domaine Ramonet, Bienvenue Batard Montrachet Grand Cru
2008 Domaine Etienne Sauzet Montrachet Grand Cru
Baked rainbow trout, celery puree, soya braised veal tail, hazelnut and snow peas
1976 Charles Noëllat Clos de Vougeot Grand Cru
1982 Gaja Barbaresco Sori San Lorenzo
Roasted venison leg, mushroom puree, juniper oil, spaetzle, pickled red cabbage
1982 Château Mouton Rothschild, Pauillac
1975 Penfolds Grange Hermitage
Selection of cheeses with toasted walnut bread, lavosh and fruit
1999 Vega Sicilia "Unico†Ribera del Duero
Palate Cleanser
Krug NV
Roasted apple and clove, rhubarb sorbet, apple crumble and custard
1976 Joh. Jos. Prüm Graacher Himmelreich Auslese Goldkapsel
Almond gelato, chocolate, coffee cloud, pear and ginger
2005 Schloss Lieser Niederberg Helden Trockenbeerenauslese Goldkapsel Riesling
Options Wines
2004 Armand Rousseau Chambertin Clos de Beze
2004 Armand Rousseau Clos de la Roche
Right up there with one of my best tastings ever. The wines, the food, the service and of course the company were all fantastic. I might sound like I’m gushing and effusive throughout the write up as opposed to my usual laconic style but some of the wines were just that good.
We started off with lovely sweet oysters, these complemented the champagnes beautifully. The 90 Salon was a bit oxidative, but the power and intensity of the fruit had the roof of my mouth buzzing, this is a massive wine. Shame it wasn’t showing as well as it could, I think Len said it was an Auction buy, otherwise it would be staggeringly good.
The Dom in comparison was a bright and bubbly baby, such finesse and linearity and purity of fruit. It had a wonderful freshly split white bun aroma that almost seemed ethereal. This will last for another 15 in a canter.
The 98 Les Clos, was bursting out of the glass, the nose of this was brilliant, a cacophony of tropical fruits, rockmelon, lemons all vying for your attention. On the palate it was sublime, with a texture and length that went on for ages. The 08 in comparison was a bit closed and taut, seeming to lack vibrancy and fruit , and was totally overshadowed by the 98.
Next was the duck which was cooked to perfection, a hint of smokiness really setting it up nicely. The Ramonet was a big brooding wine, lovely notes of oak and malo and a real solidity to it, almost transcending it’s liquid nature. On the palate it belied it’s nose and was a modicum of power and elegance without being overblown and blousey. I actually preferred this over the Monty much to my fellow diners disdain. The Montrachet was probably a victim of its age, way too young, it had this nervous energy about it, like a young colt ready to spring. Lemons, grapefruit and oak all in perfect proportion with a steely backbone of acid. Very austere on the palate and a nice length with hints of honey, given time this will be a fantastic wine.
The 76 CdV was drinking superbly for its age. Real meaty and plum driven nose, nothing floral about this, a real mans burgundy The tannins were fully resolved and it was soft and luscious, cedar, tobacco, leather all featuring, like a good Winchester chair in the den. It did fall apart a bit but we suspect it may have been inadvertently decanted along with the other younger wines for a couple of hours at the restaurant.
The Gaja at 30+ years was a poster boy for fruit and structure in perfect balance. The colour was so youthful it was hard to believe it was an 82. Sour cherry, dark fruits with enough structure to have you sucking in your cheeks to extract every last nuance of flavour it carried. A master class of elegance and power.
As an aside the sauce/gravy that was with this dish was beyond good, I had to use my puppy dogs eyes on Len to scrounge a bit of dinner bun from him to mop it up lol, I think he managed to get his roll broken up to feed around 3 of us, we reckoned if they had this with the duck course it would have been the perfect dish.
The 82 Mouton, was hard to describe, it was just so good. The wine is just intense and opulent, and so youthful. Blackcurrant which moved to the sweet cassis end of the spectrum, with cedar notes, blackberry and spices. It was one just to sit on and smell and swirl and marvel. On sipping it just invades the mouth with fruit very much in the same vein as the Lafite we had a few months prior. It is relentless. I was left shaking my head at how good it was.
If Moira (Sparky) from Treasury Wines is reading this, you tell the guys that write Rewards of Patience, who wrote this “Tight-knit bouquet with hints of licorice, leather, smoke and "dark" fruit. Solid and concentrated on the palate, with fruit characters reminiscent of ripe plums, dark chocolate and licorice. A wine with very pronounced tannins. Will it ever soften out? (Rewards of Patience, 3rd ed., 1994).
You tell them that it does soften out and that it does taste magnificent. Second for me only to the 66 Grange. This was resolved, and exactly as described “Solid and concentrated on the palate, with fruit characters reminiscent of ripe plums, dark chocolate and licorice†this was Max Schuberts last hurrah, Bravo Max, bravo.
I’m not going to lie and will admit I actually teared up a bit having these two glorious wines in front of me, going from one to the other and just marvelling at them. (but don’t tell my mates at the pub that).
Tough act to follow, the Unico said “well screw you, have a load of this†and we got this supremely elegant and balanced wine, with cherries and kirsch flavours dominant (maybe a result of a bit of VA) the tannin structure was amazing, velvety and fine grained and resolving nicely into the wine, there was coffee, blackcurrant and other dark fruits. It is a wine that is just so right.
We then had a palate refresher of Krug NV as you do to get ready for the dessert wines. Tight and racy, with pinpoint precision and acidity. As I’ve said before about Krug it just invades your mouth with tart lemon and grapefruit flavours, like one of those dental ads you can imagine all these little Krug workers in your mouth scrubbing away on the insides of your mouth with lemon flavoured brooms. Great idea to have this later in the proceedings like a Trou Normand.
The 76 Prum was singing, I’ve had my fair share of 76 Rizzas courtesy of my good friend Shannon. And this I have to say was right up there with the best, it had this inherent freshness about it which mated perfectly well with the caramelised aged characteristics. There were nectarines and peaches and a subtle acidity on the back palate. It had a sense of creaminess and softness on the palate which had you swirling it around in your mouth getting every nuance of flavour from it.
The TBA was to sweetness as Grateful Dead are to amplifier volumes, this was past 11. Weighing in at around 550g/l it was a fairly rare bottle and not officially released due to the alc not getting up above 4.5% I think only 150 bottles were released. This was a real shock to the system, and to be honest it was let down by not having a requisite acidic backbone to stave off the cloying effects. The flavours were like a wall of noise, intense lemon sherbet.
Then we hit the Options wines….
They ended up being an interesting contrast of terroir and proof that not all 2004 Burgs are to be tarred by the under-performing 2004 vintage brush. I think only myself and one other preferred the CdB over the Clos de la Roche. The CdB has intense dark fruits and real gamey power to its nose on the palate it is more of the same, with spices coming through and a really nice structure holding it all together. The CdR had a bit more clarity and finesse but lacked the power of the CdB.
Brilliant night, many thanks to all for their generosity (x 10 for Len, a true gentleman and a scholar).
First time to Restaurant Foveaux and it exceeded all expectations, the wait staff were really friendly and nothing was too much trouble for them. The food was consistently very good with all dishes working really well.
I did a small handout to help with the night so if you’re bored you can download it here (13Mb though), thanks to Anya for helping with editing, layout and words of encouragement when I thought I would never get it finished in time (you get that when starting things about 2 days prior…) - any copyright issues I'll take it down.
Only took a couple of rushed pics, Cam took a heap so he’ll no doubt post them up.
Oysters with cabernet sauvignon vinegar pearls and eschallot
1990 Salon Blanc de Blancs
1992 Dom Perignon
Seared cobia, black sesame, mushroom milk, puffed rice with pickled vegetables and elk
1998 William Fevre Les Clos, Chablis Grand Cru
2008 William Fevre Les Clos, Chablis Grand Cru
Smoked duck, broccoli, cuttlefish, duck cheese and umeboshi
2009 Domaine Ramonet, Bienvenue Batard Montrachet Grand Cru
2008 Domaine Etienne Sauzet Montrachet Grand Cru
Baked rainbow trout, celery puree, soya braised veal tail, hazelnut and snow peas
1976 Charles Noëllat Clos de Vougeot Grand Cru
1982 Gaja Barbaresco Sori San Lorenzo
Roasted venison leg, mushroom puree, juniper oil, spaetzle, pickled red cabbage
1982 Château Mouton Rothschild, Pauillac
1975 Penfolds Grange Hermitage
Selection of cheeses with toasted walnut bread, lavosh and fruit
1999 Vega Sicilia "Unico†Ribera del Duero
Palate Cleanser
Krug NV
Roasted apple and clove, rhubarb sorbet, apple crumble and custard
1976 Joh. Jos. Prüm Graacher Himmelreich Auslese Goldkapsel
Almond gelato, chocolate, coffee cloud, pear and ginger
2005 Schloss Lieser Niederberg Helden Trockenbeerenauslese Goldkapsel Riesling
Options Wines
2004 Armand Rousseau Chambertin Clos de Beze
2004 Armand Rousseau Clos de la Roche
Right up there with one of my best tastings ever. The wines, the food, the service and of course the company were all fantastic. I might sound like I’m gushing and effusive throughout the write up as opposed to my usual laconic style but some of the wines were just that good.
We started off with lovely sweet oysters, these complemented the champagnes beautifully. The 90 Salon was a bit oxidative, but the power and intensity of the fruit had the roof of my mouth buzzing, this is a massive wine. Shame it wasn’t showing as well as it could, I think Len said it was an Auction buy, otherwise it would be staggeringly good.
The Dom in comparison was a bright and bubbly baby, such finesse and linearity and purity of fruit. It had a wonderful freshly split white bun aroma that almost seemed ethereal. This will last for another 15 in a canter.
The 98 Les Clos, was bursting out of the glass, the nose of this was brilliant, a cacophony of tropical fruits, rockmelon, lemons all vying for your attention. On the palate it was sublime, with a texture and length that went on for ages. The 08 in comparison was a bit closed and taut, seeming to lack vibrancy and fruit , and was totally overshadowed by the 98.
Next was the duck which was cooked to perfection, a hint of smokiness really setting it up nicely. The Ramonet was a big brooding wine, lovely notes of oak and malo and a real solidity to it, almost transcending it’s liquid nature. On the palate it belied it’s nose and was a modicum of power and elegance without being overblown and blousey. I actually preferred this over the Monty much to my fellow diners disdain. The Montrachet was probably a victim of its age, way too young, it had this nervous energy about it, like a young colt ready to spring. Lemons, grapefruit and oak all in perfect proportion with a steely backbone of acid. Very austere on the palate and a nice length with hints of honey, given time this will be a fantastic wine.
The 76 CdV was drinking superbly for its age. Real meaty and plum driven nose, nothing floral about this, a real mans burgundy The tannins were fully resolved and it was soft and luscious, cedar, tobacco, leather all featuring, like a good Winchester chair in the den. It did fall apart a bit but we suspect it may have been inadvertently decanted along with the other younger wines for a couple of hours at the restaurant.
The Gaja at 30+ years was a poster boy for fruit and structure in perfect balance. The colour was so youthful it was hard to believe it was an 82. Sour cherry, dark fruits with enough structure to have you sucking in your cheeks to extract every last nuance of flavour it carried. A master class of elegance and power.
As an aside the sauce/gravy that was with this dish was beyond good, I had to use my puppy dogs eyes on Len to scrounge a bit of dinner bun from him to mop it up lol, I think he managed to get his roll broken up to feed around 3 of us, we reckoned if they had this with the duck course it would have been the perfect dish.
The 82 Mouton, was hard to describe, it was just so good. The wine is just intense and opulent, and so youthful. Blackcurrant which moved to the sweet cassis end of the spectrum, with cedar notes, blackberry and spices. It was one just to sit on and smell and swirl and marvel. On sipping it just invades the mouth with fruit very much in the same vein as the Lafite we had a few months prior. It is relentless. I was left shaking my head at how good it was.
If Moira (Sparky) from Treasury Wines is reading this, you tell the guys that write Rewards of Patience, who wrote this “Tight-knit bouquet with hints of licorice, leather, smoke and "dark" fruit. Solid and concentrated on the palate, with fruit characters reminiscent of ripe plums, dark chocolate and licorice. A wine with very pronounced tannins. Will it ever soften out? (Rewards of Patience, 3rd ed., 1994).
You tell them that it does soften out and that it does taste magnificent. Second for me only to the 66 Grange. This was resolved, and exactly as described “Solid and concentrated on the palate, with fruit characters reminiscent of ripe plums, dark chocolate and licorice†this was Max Schuberts last hurrah, Bravo Max, bravo.
I’m not going to lie and will admit I actually teared up a bit having these two glorious wines in front of me, going from one to the other and just marvelling at them. (but don’t tell my mates at the pub that).
Tough act to follow, the Unico said “well screw you, have a load of this†and we got this supremely elegant and balanced wine, with cherries and kirsch flavours dominant (maybe a result of a bit of VA) the tannin structure was amazing, velvety and fine grained and resolving nicely into the wine, there was coffee, blackcurrant and other dark fruits. It is a wine that is just so right.
We then had a palate refresher of Krug NV as you do to get ready for the dessert wines. Tight and racy, with pinpoint precision and acidity. As I’ve said before about Krug it just invades your mouth with tart lemon and grapefruit flavours, like one of those dental ads you can imagine all these little Krug workers in your mouth scrubbing away on the insides of your mouth with lemon flavoured brooms. Great idea to have this later in the proceedings like a Trou Normand.
The 76 Prum was singing, I’ve had my fair share of 76 Rizzas courtesy of my good friend Shannon. And this I have to say was right up there with the best, it had this inherent freshness about it which mated perfectly well with the caramelised aged characteristics. There were nectarines and peaches and a subtle acidity on the back palate. It had a sense of creaminess and softness on the palate which had you swirling it around in your mouth getting every nuance of flavour from it.
The TBA was to sweetness as Grateful Dead are to amplifier volumes, this was past 11. Weighing in at around 550g/l it was a fairly rare bottle and not officially released due to the alc not getting up above 4.5% I think only 150 bottles were released. This was a real shock to the system, and to be honest it was let down by not having a requisite acidic backbone to stave off the cloying effects. The flavours were like a wall of noise, intense lemon sherbet.
Then we hit the Options wines….
They ended up being an interesting contrast of terroir and proof that not all 2004 Burgs are to be tarred by the under-performing 2004 vintage brush. I think only myself and one other preferred the CdB over the Clos de la Roche. The CdB has intense dark fruits and real gamey power to its nose on the palate it is more of the same, with spices coming through and a really nice structure holding it all together. The CdR had a bit more clarity and finesse but lacked the power of the CdB.
Brilliant night, many thanks to all for their generosity (x 10 for Len, a true gentleman and a scholar).
First time to Restaurant Foveaux and it exceeded all expectations, the wait staff were really friendly and nothing was too much trouble for them. The food was consistently very good with all dishes working really well.
I did a small handout to help with the night so if you’re bored you can download it here (13Mb though), thanks to Anya for helping with editing, layout and words of encouragement when I thought I would never get it finished in time (you get that when starting things about 2 days prior…) - any copyright issues I'll take it down.
Only took a couple of rushed pics, Cam took a heap so he’ll no doubt post them up.
Re: WOTY Tasting
Wow, what an absolutely stunning line up. Thank you for sharing your experience, nice to read.
Option games are always good fun!
Option games are always good fun!
Re: WOTY Tasting
Lovely write up Dave.
Your handout was superb, and would certainly have taken a lot of effort. Thanks mate.
I'm +1 on most of your notes, except I did find the 04 Rousseau Chambertin CdB got quite green with breathing.
With so many classic wines, voting a WOTN seemed inappropriate, but my flight of the night was also the Mouton/Grange.
That I demoted the Montrachet flight to second place, genuinely shocked me, but tells how good these reds were drinking together.
Wonderful way to sign off the year. Many thanks to all the Grape Mates for your ongoing generosity and cheeky banter. Many many thanks to Len who's amazing ability to get this organised in the space of a week or so, is only beaten by his generosity. Legend.
Happy holidays, see you in 2014!
Your handout was superb, and would certainly have taken a lot of effort. Thanks mate.
I'm +1 on most of your notes, except I did find the 04 Rousseau Chambertin CdB got quite green with breathing.
With so many classic wines, voting a WOTN seemed inappropriate, but my flight of the night was also the Mouton/Grange.
That I demoted the Montrachet flight to second place, genuinely shocked me, but tells how good these reds were drinking together.
Wonderful way to sign off the year. Many thanks to all the Grape Mates for your ongoing generosity and cheeky banter. Many many thanks to Len who's amazing ability to get this organised in the space of a week or so, is only beaten by his generosity. Legend.
Happy holidays, see you in 2014!
- Eurocentric
- Posts: 97
- Joined: Wed Jun 24, 2009 10:35 am
- Location: Sydney
- Contact:
Re: WOTY Tasting
What year is the Fritz Haag Brauneberger Juffer Sonnenuhr Auslese GK?
NB: I import wine from 100 boutique producers in France, Germany, Italy, Spain, NZ and SA. You may think my opinions are biased ;-) As opinions are :-)
Re: WOTY Tasting
Great write-up as always Dave. We had such a superb night. It seemed surreal in many ways both at the time and looking back, we had all looked forward to it a lot, and it just unfolded so nicely. Such a fun night with the Grape Mates!
A few comments of my own..... Amongst a superb lineup, my four favourites poking above the other awesomeness were the Dom 92, Gaja 82, Mouton 82 and Prum 76.
The Dom 92 was in the top 3 Champagnes I've ever had, so vibrant, crisp, powerful and energetic. Extremely memorable. Thanks Anya!
The Gaja 82 was a total stunner on the nose, seriously amazing. My 76 Clos de Vougeot was served in the same flight, and I knew it was in trouble comparison-wise as the Gaja just had it all going on in spades. That truly rare Nebbiolo nose of roses, flowers, herbs, pot pourri, everyone around the table was stunned, one esteemed Grape Mate noted it was very possibly his WOTY right there, and that's saying something. The palate flowed through as only a great Nebbiolo can, power, texture and great big tannins. Awesome, thanks MarkAS!
The Mouton 82...... Expectations are always going to be huge for a wine like this. It was my first Mouton, and it lived up to the hype. Whether it's worth the four figure bucks is a debatable point as I find it becomes a bit of an exponential scale when you get above $150 or so. But that's irrelevant as it was a very beautiful wine. It had such a depth to it, the tannins were perfect, the ripeness level just nailed it. It had the best bits of some of my other WOTY all combined together in a magical way. Ok, so it may well be worth that kind of money! I'm thinking it's my runner up WOTY. Huge thanks to Len!
And the Prum 76.... like Dave said, with a mate like Shannon (from RareWineDinners), I've had great exposure to aged German rieslings, and this was up there with the best of them. Precise acidity, zingy complex citrus notes and such a feeling of confidence about it. Long length, a great bottle, thanks 'Griff' !
But even though these four were the top for me, most of the other wines were so close to this top level as well. It's all a bit effusive and gushy, but well... you've seen the lineup!
The Grange 75 had an incredible nose, but for me didn't quite match the nose on the palate. I still loved it, but ... oh whatever you know what I mean, but up against the Mouton and the Unico it was holding it's own, so an impressive showing. I often think the under-appreciated vintages are the ones to go for.
I'd be typing all night if I described the rest in detail........ Clos De Vougeot 76 was lovely, Unico superb, Montrachet was powerful, confident, all class, yet tight and reluctant. Ramonet BBM was spearminty, expressive and open for business. The Les Clos 98 was definitely the best Chablis I've had, lots of yum going on there. The Krug was quite stunning, best bottle of the MV/NV I've had yet, and such a good idea to serve it after the reds and before the higher RS wines. The TBA was massively sweet, sugar syrup! Intensity plus and perhaps with the right kind of citrussy dessert it could have been pretty darn special.
The two 2004 blind Burgs were an eye opener! Not really my style of Burg, a bit lean and mean, tiny hints of green, yet by no means bad or poor quality. The Clos de la Roche seemed more integrated and ready to go now, but I suspect the Clos de Beze will improve and overtake it with some more cellaring time. I'd leave it 5-10 years at least, would be very interesting to see, I think it will be very good, given enough time. Might help a few 04 haters to reconsider!
The less amazing wines were (sadly)... the Les Clos 08 (many opinions as to what was wrong with it, I'd pick very low level musty cork influence, no TCA that I could pick, but a subtle cardboard/hessian note was detracting slightly). Also the Fritz Haag (was an 05 Nev) was not quite right either, seemed slightly stripped somehow, again fault opinions differed. It was my first Salon (nice to start with 1990!), but suspect it was a bit too advanced based on others descriptions of it from a few years ago. The feel of the acid and structure was amazing though!
Food was mostly excellent, and I've been longing for another plate of that duck dish all day, one of the best plates of food I've ever had, and the rainbow trout was up there too. Only real miss was the venison, which I thought did match the wines OK, but wasn't a great dish.
The staff were so good, and there was a lot going on that night! Huge thanks to Cassie, Michael and the team at Foveaux Restaurant. Highly recommended, in fact I want to go back ASAP!
And finally, a big thank you to all my fellow friends who attended and were so generous. A memorable night, certainly one of the best ever.
Cheers
Tim
A few comments of my own..... Amongst a superb lineup, my four favourites poking above the other awesomeness were the Dom 92, Gaja 82, Mouton 82 and Prum 76.
The Dom 92 was in the top 3 Champagnes I've ever had, so vibrant, crisp, powerful and energetic. Extremely memorable. Thanks Anya!
The Gaja 82 was a total stunner on the nose, seriously amazing. My 76 Clos de Vougeot was served in the same flight, and I knew it was in trouble comparison-wise as the Gaja just had it all going on in spades. That truly rare Nebbiolo nose of roses, flowers, herbs, pot pourri, everyone around the table was stunned, one esteemed Grape Mate noted it was very possibly his WOTY right there, and that's saying something. The palate flowed through as only a great Nebbiolo can, power, texture and great big tannins. Awesome, thanks MarkAS!
The Mouton 82...... Expectations are always going to be huge for a wine like this. It was my first Mouton, and it lived up to the hype. Whether it's worth the four figure bucks is a debatable point as I find it becomes a bit of an exponential scale when you get above $150 or so. But that's irrelevant as it was a very beautiful wine. It had such a depth to it, the tannins were perfect, the ripeness level just nailed it. It had the best bits of some of my other WOTY all combined together in a magical way. Ok, so it may well be worth that kind of money! I'm thinking it's my runner up WOTY. Huge thanks to Len!
And the Prum 76.... like Dave said, with a mate like Shannon (from RareWineDinners), I've had great exposure to aged German rieslings, and this was up there with the best of them. Precise acidity, zingy complex citrus notes and such a feeling of confidence about it. Long length, a great bottle, thanks 'Griff' !
But even though these four were the top for me, most of the other wines were so close to this top level as well. It's all a bit effusive and gushy, but well... you've seen the lineup!
The Grange 75 had an incredible nose, but for me didn't quite match the nose on the palate. I still loved it, but ... oh whatever you know what I mean, but up against the Mouton and the Unico it was holding it's own, so an impressive showing. I often think the under-appreciated vintages are the ones to go for.
I'd be typing all night if I described the rest in detail........ Clos De Vougeot 76 was lovely, Unico superb, Montrachet was powerful, confident, all class, yet tight and reluctant. Ramonet BBM was spearminty, expressive and open for business. The Les Clos 98 was definitely the best Chablis I've had, lots of yum going on there. The Krug was quite stunning, best bottle of the MV/NV I've had yet, and such a good idea to serve it after the reds and before the higher RS wines. The TBA was massively sweet, sugar syrup! Intensity plus and perhaps with the right kind of citrussy dessert it could have been pretty darn special.
The two 2004 blind Burgs were an eye opener! Not really my style of Burg, a bit lean and mean, tiny hints of green, yet by no means bad or poor quality. The Clos de la Roche seemed more integrated and ready to go now, but I suspect the Clos de Beze will improve and overtake it with some more cellaring time. I'd leave it 5-10 years at least, would be very interesting to see, I think it will be very good, given enough time. Might help a few 04 haters to reconsider!
The less amazing wines were (sadly)... the Les Clos 08 (many opinions as to what was wrong with it, I'd pick very low level musty cork influence, no TCA that I could pick, but a subtle cardboard/hessian note was detracting slightly). Also the Fritz Haag (was an 05 Nev) was not quite right either, seemed slightly stripped somehow, again fault opinions differed. It was my first Salon (nice to start with 1990!), but suspect it was a bit too advanced based on others descriptions of it from a few years ago. The feel of the acid and structure was amazing though!
Food was mostly excellent, and I've been longing for another plate of that duck dish all day, one of the best plates of food I've ever had, and the rainbow trout was up there too. Only real miss was the venison, which I thought did match the wines OK, but wasn't a great dish.
The staff were so good, and there was a lot going on that night! Huge thanks to Cassie, Michael and the team at Foveaux Restaurant. Highly recommended, in fact I want to go back ASAP!
And finally, a big thank you to all my fellow friends who attended and were so generous. A memorable night, certainly one of the best ever.
Cheers
Tim
Last edited by TiggerK on Mon Dec 23, 2013 8:25 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- VINH NGUYEN
- Posts: 216
- Joined: Wed Oct 17, 2007 10:50 pm
Re: WOTY Tasting
how do i join you guys for 2014? would love to come to one of these amazing wine dinners i keep seeing on here ...
Re: WOTY Tasting
VINH NGUYEN wrote:how do i join you guys for 2014? would love to come to one of these amazing wine dinners i keep seeing on here ...
Hi Vinh, they are sort of done through our private tasting group and then we limit it to under 10 people so we get decent pours. Most of the time we fill up the spots within the group.
Put a post on the forum like the ones Hacker does and see if you can get any interest from people for a super premium night. Probably not the best time of year to try it, so maybe wait until Jan/Feb when life is settling back down again to normal and put one up.
Re: WOTY Tasting
VINH NGUYEN wrote:how do i join you guys for 2014? would love to come to one of these amazing wine dinners i keep seeing on here ...
The other possibility, if you are happy to pay for an all inclusive wine dinner, is getting in touch with Shannon and Greg at RareWineDinners.
They have events every month or two, at varying price levels, in Sydney and Perth.
Cheers.
- VINH NGUYEN
- Posts: 216
- Joined: Wed Oct 17, 2007 10:50 pm
Re: WOTY Tasting
odyssey wrote:VINH NGUYEN wrote:how do i join you guys for 2014? would love to come to one of these amazing wine dinners i keep seeing on here ...
The other possibility, if you are happy to pay for an all inclusive wine dinner, is getting in touch with Shannon and Greg at RareWineDinners.
They have events every month or two, at varying price levels, in Sydney and Perth.
Cheers.
Yeap, i've recently joined onto the rare wine dinners mailing list, so i'll see whats in store for 2014.