winetastic wrote:It's a relative thing... years ago I was lucky enough to get invited to taste a lineup of around 15 new release hunter semillon - all double blind. At the time I recall picking both the Tyrrell's Vat 1 and the Mount Pleasant Lovedale as two of the top 3 - the primary reason was they were more balanced.
What is balance in this case though? Both of those Sems are vastly different with Lovedale being much riper and fuller and Vat 1 carrying much more acidity....
I'm not saying people can't judge young Sems..they obviously know what to look for...but I'm asking if people can describe what that is...Balance would suggest the right amount of acid vs. fruit (could be some other stuff as well I guess) but in the case of Vat 1, it is tipped on the far side of acid vs. fruit.. This is against other Sems that, when younger, have a much better balance between fruit and acid... Is it a certain taste you get from the fruit? Purity? With 5 or so years it becomes a lot easier to see where the wine will be going looking at the intensity and the acid..
I'm legitimately interested in this subject..I love Hunter Sem...and Vat 1 being my favorite it would really be nice to get a better picture of what people are looking at when it is young. Like I said, for me, if the acid is there, I know it'll age...somewhere in there is quality fruit as well and maybe this is just where I'm missing it...and it isn't that I dislike acid either...At some point in the future, it is one of those wines I wouldn't mind trying to make on my own but I'd like to not have to wait 5+ years and vintages later to start adjusting what I was doing...