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TORB
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Its officially Sunday - reports due...

Post by TORB »

Hi Good Peoples,

Its a rough life, but someone has to drink all those free samples. :)
Last night I had to retaste a Parola's Cab cause Smithy didn't like what I had to say about the first bottle. :P When I opened the origional, although the wine had only recently been bottled, the Cork had not sprung back properly, and already, there was a purple stain three quarters of the way up the cork. I started off the TN by saying, "A sledgehammer nose with an eye watering level of VA, ..." Smithy knew the level of VA in the wine, cause its been tested and figured the wine I tried was dodgie so sent me another one. Here is that TN.

Warrabilla 2004 Parola’s Cabernet Sauvignon sells for $28. A sledgehammer nose with lifted alcohol, the fruit has certainly been pile driven into this wine; plum, blackcurrant, chocolate, mocha, coffee and spearmint aromas have incredible intensity. Needless to say, this is a full-bodied wine, in fact it's a big bastard, but despite its size, everything is in proportion. Strong, deeply seated fruit delivers an off-sweet attack, with flavours that match the bouquet; they are perfectly interwoven with long, smooth, dusty tannins that finished dry and the flavours are supported by a complimentary, slight alcoholic sweetness. Big and ballsy, if you like a wallop of flavour with a big whack of tannin, you will love this; but if you're after “elegance,” go suck on a Yarra Pinot. Rated as Bloody Enjoyable with **** for value, it's approachable now but should improve in the short term and then hold for a few years. After many hours in the decanter, the beast tamed down; clove and meaty aromas surfaced and these also flowed through to the palate.

Now what have you guys and girls been drinking .... and you too Gianna :shock: :D
Cheers
Ric
TORBWine

Gianna..

Post by Gianna.. »

Thanks TORB,
I'll be the first to start the round-up.

1998 Rockford Cab Sav
I am always impressed with Rockford wines.
Color was a beautiful Ruby Red, nose was full of plums, currants and vanilla oak. This wine has really mellowed in the last year. The taste was smooth and silky with a long and complex aftertaste. It had a creamy palate full of plum flavours and casssis and smooth tannins. Great drinking. I think near it's peak, but should hold for many more years.

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Red Bigot
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Post by Red Bigot »

It's been a big week, but I've been too busy enjoying it to bother about tasting notes. My Thai friends are visiting, Meta is into wine in a big way, used to be a prolific poster in the original Auswine forum when he was living in Canberra, so I took him and his wife on a lightning winery tour on the way back from Melbourne to Canberra.

Monday was Great Western and Pyrenees: Garden Gully, which is being resurrected by a local consortium as an outlet for other small wineries in the area as well as wines under the Garden Gully label, but it seems they have lost the previous shiraz vineyard. Seppelts Gt Western CD and the Drives tour was fun, Chalambar 2003 Shiraz is a ripper, didn't like the new Moyston Cab-Merlot much though, got them to send back my 6-pack of St Peters 2002 plus a few bottles of the Show Sparkling Shiraz 94 and Chalambar. Bests Bin O Shiraz 2001 is very good and the self-guided wander around the underground cellars amongst the big barrels is fun, the bottle cellar behind the security grill and the rack of dust-covered bottles would be interesting to delve into.

On to Moonambel, Dalwhinnie has to be one of the prettiest CD/Vineyard spots around, the wines are pretty good too, the firm, fine tannin structure on the Cabernet is outstanding and I think the fruit will cope. The frost-affected 2003 vintage and small harvest means the Dalwhinnie wines may not make it to retail this year, DJ said he was focussing on export and mail-order regulars, so if you want some, it may be smart to get them soon.

We were sprung by Ian Summerfield tasting his shiraz grapes and taking photos, he proceeded to give us an impromptu lesson on testing grape ripeness and baume levels, at the winery Mark Summerfield was finishing up the day pressing merlot and let us taste the pressings and also a tank sample of the 05 Shiraz, vintage 05 is looking pretty good in western/central Vic. The 03 Summerfield reds have settled down nicely since the "just-bottled" samples at Wine-Oz last November, I think TORB has some TN on the way.

Overnight at Bendigo, dinner at the Bridge Hotel Dining Room (recommended by David Jones at Dalwhinnie), food was good, the waiter a little non-plussed when I wandered up to the wine rack to check vintages (I've been caught before, wine lists aren't always updated), he commented that vintage shouldn't matter in Australia, the weather is hot/good every year.

Chateau Leamon has released their 2003 reds, again small yeilds from a frost-reduced vintage, the Cabernet/Cab Franc/Merlot blend at around $20 has excellent tannin structure to go with nice fruit, the reserves at $38 are showing their new oak and are a bit subdued in the fruit department at present, they may not make it to retail this vintage either.

Harcourt Valley Winery is a lovely spot, the reds on tasting were Ok, not outstanding, the higher-priced reds not available for tasting.

On to Heathcote, we got off to a bad start finding Heathcote Wines outlet in the main street, the tourist map guides you in the wrong direction and the person behind the counter seemed to take it as a personal insult when we pointed that out. I gather this place has changed hands recently and they are trying to buld up a mail-order business by offering discounts to "members", the reds are quite good and reasonable value, from the cleanskin up, with the 2002 Curagee Shiraz @ $40 to members being the standout.

Munari only had a couple of reds left for tasting and sale, but it was a pleasant visit with the sound of the grape press in the nearby winery as a background. Deborah Munari suggested we call in at nearby Huntleigh, but it wasn't a great suggestion, Huntleigh is on the market and has sold grapes to Barnadown Run rather than making wine last vintage and this, so stocks can be run down, the tasting samples had been open 4 or more days and were pretty tired, except for the 2001 Shiraz which held up a bit better than the other 2 reds on offer.

Overnight at Rutherglen, a pre-dinner stroll from town around Chambers and back along the derelict railway line, then an excellent dinner at Beaumonts (Ric the Chocalate Mud cake wasn't the same one you had last time, or as decadently good, see Ric's forthcoming Chapter 5 of his recent tour).

We were out at Warrabilla before 9:30 and received a friendly welcome from Red Dog as well as Carol and Andrew. Before tasting our way through the current Warrabilla reds (2004) Andrew did a quick blend from several barrels of 2005 Shiraz, he's pretty happy with the vintage despite some late rain.

Next stop was Bullers, to let Meta try the Calliope Shiraz and the Rare Muscat and Tokay, the Tokay seemed to have a lot more life and character than the surprisingly flat Muscat. We were told the current $60 price tag would be increasing soon, as other Rare-level blends in the area were $100+

After a lunch stop for Parker Pies (I'm in training for a May trip to SA with Ric and the Meat Pie King) the last winery was Morris, where they showed us the 3 levels of muscat and tokay with two sets of three glasses to quickly assess the increase in complexity and age. The CD-only Tokay and Muscat are good value at around $30.

To cap off the week, I had organised a dinner at Rock Salt Cafe, with a menu designed for red wines from my cellar. The Menu and wine selections are here: http://users.tpg.com.au/handreck/RedBigotWineDinner.htm

This retirement gig is a bit tiring so far, I may have to go back to work for a holiday! :lol:
Cheers
Brian
Life's too short to drink white wine and red wine is better for you too! :-)

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Post by Guest »

Craiglee 1999 shiraz- sound & coll year Rhone like.

Reynella C/S 1998- Varietal, full bodied, soft in the mouth tannins but they grip in the aftertaste like a vice. Needs time.

Palliser Estate sauvignon blanc 2004- Vgood but I reckon a cool year in Martinborough for sav blanc. Powerful goosberry, passionfruit, sound weight & piquant acidity. Lacks the delectable tropical fruits nuances of warmer years.

Chateau Musar 1998- Medium weight, porty, sour cherry & a good dose of VA. Needs bottle age and was enjoyable after time in a decanter. Polished mouthfeel and a long finish.


JamieBahrain
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Post by JamieBahrain »

Was me above. And cool year Rhone not coll. :?

And it was a Craiglee 96 shiraz not the 99. Although both are similar in being average vintages.
Last edited by JamieBahrain on Sun Apr 10, 2005 11:20 am, edited 1 time in total.

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bigkid
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Post by bigkid »

Hi all,

Ric, I have a half case of the Warrabilla reds on the way - looking forward to the Parola's.

Here's my list (most consumed in one evening - last night - we had help):

Fire Block Old Vine Shiraz 2002 – Got a few bottles of this to try as a quaffer. It is about $15 a bottle by the case. I asked the guy at the shop for some advice on ‘big reds’ and this was included on the list he came up with. I’m happy he did. It is a bit ‘edgy’ and the tannin a bit over the top when opening but this settles down after decanting and the fruit and wood come through. The finish is all cinnamon. We tried some leftovers the next evening and found it very drinkable, less emphasis on the spice, seemed smoother with mellow fruit (if that means anything). Will be getting some more of this as a good everyday wine.

Tamar Ridge 2004 Riesling – More sauvignon blanc than riesling. Floral rather than fruity, bit like the French styled rieslings but with a sharper SB like finish. (What is it that produces that sharp finish? Is it acid?)

Tamar Ridge 2004 Sauvignon Blanc – pretty punchy wine, again with a sharpish finish, holds up well with spicy Thai food.

Tamar Ridge 2003 Pinot Noir – not usually a fan of PN, but it seemed to go well with the seafood pasta dish we made last night for guests. This is a fuller, smoother PN, plenty of fruit, not a lot of tannin.

(Yes, we have been to a Tamar Ridge Tasting recently – still have a few more bottles to go)

Cloudy Bay 2004 Sauvignon Blanc – Typical of the mid range NZ sauvignon blancs from the Marlborough region. Peaches and apricots. Crisp, but less intense than the Tamar Ridge.

Torbreck 2002 The Bothie – Lighter, fruitier styled sweet wine. Went well with home made panna cotta and berries when something like a bortrytis or other stickies would have been too heavy and too much. Comes in a 750 ml bottle – enough for four people to drink and enough to drizzle over the berries.

Plan to open a replacement bottle of Blown Away Bare Bottom Hills Shiraz 2002 this evening (previous bottle was slightly corked). Looking forward this wine, with some sharp kefalograviera cheese, Sicilian olives, dried fruit, chilling to some grooves on the sound system for an hour or so before I launch into preparing dinner.

**Edit**Since had the Blown Away and can report that it was a deep plummy red with a chocolaty nose and strong on the alcohol. On tasting, the tannin left a little tanginess around the gums and the acid seemed a little on the high side. The chocolate flavour carried through, it was also strong on spice with cloves and cinnamon, some burned wood. Fruit was pretty reserved - possibly some plum, not sure. There was a bit of sweetness. Long finish with chocolate dominating. Tannin and acid, for me, left this wine a bit fiesty at three years of age. Maybe it will probable settle with a bit of time - in the absence of more dominant fruit, not sure whether it will be a corker. (How did I go for my first serious tasting Note??)


Regards,

Allan
Last edited by bigkid on Mon Apr 11, 2005 6:13 pm, edited 1 time in total.

Vickie
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Post by Vickie »

'morning everyone,

I'm not very good at this but here goes...

Shaw & Smith Merlot 1999 - corked :cry:
my last bottle - the other 5 were fabulous though :)
{Hey Gavin - this was one of my first purchases from you. Hasn't my palate changed!}

Warrabilla Reserve Shiraz 2002
Inky black with a huge "drink me" nose.
Highly Recommended especially for the price.
Warrabilla is now firmly on my drinking radar

Wynn's Cabernet Sauvignon "Black Label" 1998
A nose of blackcurrent. Very smooth but I suspect that its still a bit too young. IMHO, this wine smells and tastes like Coonawarra. Hopefully all this bodes well for the John Riddoch 1998. Can't wait to try it again in 6 months. Excellent value.

Cheers,
Vickie :D

action2096
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Post by action2096 »

Gramps 2002 Shiraz

Have read a lot about this wine and have been a bit slow on the uptake. Beware if you are into the smoother softer style this wine is NOT for you.. Big tannic and a little rough around the edges. I also thought that i detected a hint of warmth but at 15% i guess thats to be expected.. All in all not a bad quaffer and i would be interested to try again in a couple of years

Seppelt Chalambar 2003

Tried the much hyped 02 and was not very impressed. Glad to report that the 03 in my opinion is a much better wine. Still very young but seems to have a lot going on. Inky black colour and on the nose i was getting a fair bit of fruit and cracked pepper. It has a long finish with firm persistent tannins.
Had a look at the seppelt tasting notes and the winemaker reckons that this wine has the potential to cellar till 2016. Anyone else have any thoughts on this ?

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Elvispga
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Post by Elvispga »

Another Wine Vault friday night tasting.

Unfortunatley no Aussies however some very interesting wines.

1997 Masseto Toscana (Merlot) Wow. Amazing wine especially as I thought I didn't like Merlot. An amazingly complex wine with great length. I hadn't heard of this wine before but learned it is one of the great Italian Merlots!

1996 La Chapelle Hermitage (Rhone) Wonderful spice and intense pepper on the palet. The finish seemed to last forever.

1997 Dalla Valle Cabernet Sauvignon Napa Apparantley a difficult to find Cab. Seemed ok but didn't blow my socks off.

1995 Bollinger RD (Recentely Disgorged (2004) A very bright and clean Champagne. Amazing crisp green apple palate. I've never had a Chamagne like this.

2000 Stonefly Cabernet Franc Napa Bordeaux style blend predominately. I quite enjoyed this.

2002 F Brookwalter Cabernet Sauvignon Seemed an ordinary Cab to me.

Cheers
Elvis

Jakob
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Post by Jakob »

Just a couple of impressions. Tried a few Austrailian Merlots as a follow up to the thread, all forgettable with the exception of the

Plantagenet 'Rocky Horror Vineyard' Merlot 2001 which was Very Good/Excellent and should improve over the next 5+ years. Deep vibrant purple, fragrant, chalky, black and blue spectrum fruit with excellent depth, very good length. Would probably have guessed a good Yarra Valley Cabernet, to be honest.

Mount Pleasant Rosehill 1998 was given a good airing and probably needs a few more years to come together. Right now, this bottle anyway, was tough, leathery, deep sour cherry notes, somewhat astringent but seems well balanced. Will it improve? I don't know, but it will definitely last another 5-10 years. Good/Very Good?

Hollick Cabernet (orange capsule) 2002 This is a pretty impressive effort, is the Ravenswood of same vintage out yet? Floral notes and classic Cabernet dark fruit, coffee and yet a little bit of a green edge to the end of the flavour profile, good tannins and great balance. A 'sample' bottle, I don't have any more but if I did, I'd leave it alone for 5-10 years. If this was a Wynns BL, and the style is not dissimilar, it would be a very good vintage. Very Good/Excellent.

Small Gully Shiraz 2000 Yummy Barossan flavour profile, buttery chocolate and sweet red fruits, a little bit of petroleum, tastes like old vine material. Medium weight, velvety tannins and good length, it's simply lovely right now and I'd give it a Very Good all day. So easy to drink but no hurry yet.

Fox Creek Short Row Shiraz 1999 and 2000 The 2000 is lighter in weight, colour and length, yet packs some reasonable McLaren Vale flavour. The 1999 on the other hand is still deep in colour, and a much bigger wine with great fruit weight and balance. Drink the 2000 now and the 1999 whenever you want within the next 10+ years. 2000, Good/Very Good, 1999 Excellent.

I think that was all :D

Happy wining,

Jakob

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JohnP
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Post by JohnP »

Pretty mixed bag:

Schulz 2001 Johanne Zinfandel ($20): Very ripe, fruit dominant, big fruit cake nose and palate, nice oak.
Schulz 2002 Benjamin Shiraz($25): Very nice wine, balanced, loads of ripe Barossa fruit, good oak - lasted 4 days and was still showing great fruit.
Schulz 2001 Marcus Shiraz($65): A cracker!
Crawford River 2004 Riesling($30): Citrus, acid, fruit, balance, crisp, etc. everything a great CR should be. I savoured this over a week and it lasted fantastically well - a testament to the longevity of these wines.
Rene Engel 2002 Les Brulees($130): complex, powerful, great fruit, still very very young.
Dominique Laurent 2001 Eschezeaux($145): A delightful wine, sophisticated everything, power and softness at the same time.
Hoddles Creek 2002 Chardonney($20): Still do not see 95 points here - second bottle and its still a lttle disjointed with obvious spiced palate coming from oak not fruit.
Stefano Lubiana 2004 Primavera PN($27): Simple, confected, little of interest - maybe the estate bottling is better.
Jamesons Run 2001 Winemakers Reserve($30): Very nice wine, balanced, plenty of ripe fruit, chocolate, mocha and a little vanillin, great palate weight, lovely finish.
Penfold 1999 St Henri($? - gift): Nice wine, lovely spiced nose, soft and balanced palate with great oak treatment - should last well.
Barossa Shiraz

Davo
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Post by Davo »

Langmeil "The Freedom" 2000 Balltearer. A beautiful rendition of Barosaa shiraz. Big but with subtle use of oak. Still showing more of itself after 3 hours open. Only wish I had more.

Faustino I Gran Riserva 1981 Amazingly youthful fruit. I presented this blind as part of an options game and none picked within 10 years of the age, all thinking it was younger than 1990. And picked by most as the wine of the trio when tasted against:-

Veritas "Heinrich" 2002 which was my personal favorite. A very lovely SMG at a reasonable price, showing very strong Mataro characteristics.

&

Brown Brothers Temranillo 1998 which is developing very well and also still showing plenty of varietal fruit characters. Yes there was a Spanish theme to the presentation.


Auswine "Glaymond" Cleanskin This is very much a 2nd day wine. I was very disappointed when I first opened the wine, especially after the raves seen on this board. It was thin in the mouth and very feral with not a huge amount of fruit definition. I left about a third sitting in the bottle overnight, with the cork in to keep the bugs out, and it was an almost completely different wine the next afternoon. The body had seemingly filled out and it was now a satidfying mouthful, still demonstrated plenty of earthy feral charracters and loads of tarry oak to go with the now plentiful mocca chocalate and blacberries. I would venture to say that there may be a fair gob of Mouvedre snuck in there.

Seppelt Chalambar 2003 Plenty said about this already. Very nice wine for the money.

Saltram Mamre Brook Shiraz 2002. A lot has been said about the Cab, but this is seriously good value for money as well. Huge Barossa fruit at a cheap price.

Baileys Cabernet Sauvignon 1996 Very nice warm climate cab with years ahead of it. Tons of blackcurrant and cedary cigar box characters without a hint of capsicum.

Tatachilla McLarenVale Cabernet Sauvignon 1998. Winestates Cab of the year I think in 2000. Whatever they reckoned I still liked the wine then and still like it now. A bit of bottle variation in the current box I am drinking my way through but this one was a ripper. Enough mint and capsicum to keep it interesting without making me feel like I was drinking a salad and tons of blackcurrant and tobacco leaf with cedary oak spices.

Grosset Polish Hill Reisling 2001 Very nice reisling dominated by petroleum on the nose and in the mouth and tons of lemon lime acid and a chalky minerality.

Rockford Eden Valley Reisling 2002 Also very nice but at the other end of the reisling scale with light floral notes to go with the gentle citrus acid backbone.

Brown Brothers "Limited Release" Shiraz 1998 This was a CD/Members only release. Produced in only a very small batch when they were experimenting with winemaking styles. This particular batch had no filtering or fining and was the standout wine at their CD back in 1999. It is still a standout if the half bottle I had last night is anything to go by. Gobs of blackberry and mocca with subtle spicey oak and a long finish. Down to my last few unfortunately.

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n4sir
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Post by n4sir »

Jakob wrote:
Hollick Cabernet (orange capsule) 2002 This is a pretty impressive effort, is the Ravenswood of same vintage out yet? Floral notes and classic Cabernet dark fruit, coffee and yet a little bit of a green edge to the end of the flavour profile, good tannins and great balance. A 'sample' bottle, I don't have any more but if I did, I'd leave it alone for 5-10 years. If this was a Wynns BL, and the style is not dissimilar, it would be a very good vintage. Very Good/Excellent.



The 2002 was made in the same style as the 1984 Jimmy Watson winner; a straight Cabernet Sauvignon from the one dry-grown block. It's a brilliant wine, and did just as well on the wine show circuit pipping the 2002 Majella to take out the Limestone Coast Wine Show top gong for the best Cabernet, plus winning gold at Adelaide.

As you said, it's a great one to cellar - if you can manage to keep yourself from indulging in it right now! Ridiculously cheap at $25/bottle RRP.

Cheers
Ian
Forget about goodness and mercy, they're gone.

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Maximus
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Post by Maximus »

No full tasting notes I'm sorry but I will list the wines I've tried and my opinions:

2001 Johanneshof Pinot Noir - Smoky, boring and disjointed. Had lost primary fruit and wasn't enjoyable.

2004 Conroys Pinot Noir - Simple, fruity and lacking varietal character. I was surprised to find the wine came from Central Otago.

2003 Torbreck Woodcutters Red (100% Shiraz) - A rich wine, with gorgeous dark berry fruit on the nose carrying forth to a classy and sustained finish with a yummy mouthfeel.

1998 Leasingham Bastion Shiraz Cabernet - A definite surprise package for a $10 wine. My friend and I mused excessively over the aromas picked up off the complex nose - cherry, cedar, liquorice, musk, forest floor - there were plenty. The wine had moderate length and flavours were perhaps thinning a little on the palate, the wine now at its peak. Still, great QPR.

2000 Leasingham Bin 56 Cab Malbec - A personal favourite of mine and another bottle that didn't disappoint. Interesting to note that the classic clare cab wasn't made in 2000, with all top end fruit going to the Bin 56.

2004 Villa Maria PB Chardonnay - The Villa Maria PB's are usually a safe bet, but I found this sweeter style a little too much. Simple with lots of fruit, I forced my way through this bottle.

2001 Plantagenet Cab Sauv - Quite a robust nose for a cool climate cab (to what I'm used to anyway), with plenty of energy on the palate too. I actually found this a bit too 'big' despite everything being in balance. Would love to try an older vintage wine and determine the wine's ageing potential, which I would rate with vast longevity based on the sample I tried.
Max
-----
Avant d’être bon, un vin doit être vrai

Jakob
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Location: Sydney City

Post by Jakob »

n4sir wrote:
Jakob wrote:
Hollick Cabernet (orange capsule) 2002 This is a pretty impressive effort, is the Ravenswood of same vintage out yet? Floral notes and classic Cabernet dark fruit, coffee and yet a little bit of a green edge to the end of the flavour profile, good tannins and great balance. A 'sample' bottle, I don't have any more but if I did, I'd leave it alone for 5-10 years. If this was a Wynns BL, and the style is not dissimilar, it would be a very good vintage. Very Good/Excellent.



The 2002 was made in the same style as the 1984 Jimmy Watson winner; a straight Cabernet Sauvignon from the one dry-grown block. It's a brilliant wine, and did just as well on the wine show circuit pipping the 2002 Majella to take out the Limestone Coast Wine Show top gong for the best Cabernet, plus winning gold at Adelaide.

As you said, it's a great one to cellar - if you can manage to keep yourself from indulging in it right now! Ridiculously cheap at $25/bottle RRP.

Cheers
Ian

Thanks Ian, you're not Ian Hollick by chance? :lol: Yeah, it is excellent value! I really hold Hollick in very high esteem, a somewhat quiet achiever with a truly stunning wine appearing more often than every now and again. Might dig out a 1998 Wilgha for the fun of it a little later on tonight :D

Ian S
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Post by Ian S »

Bailey's 1904 Block Shiraz 1994
Opened on friday & struck me as being lighter bodied & more mature than expected. On the Saturday night it seemed bigger & younger, yet showing good aged character including a faint whiff of mushroom/truffle. Ignoring the prospect of time travel or a cunning new winemaker technique of reverse ageing, I think this shows how much mood can affect tasting. In this case I'd just got back from a week working away from home on friday & was knackered.

Monteiths Black
Always a sucker for the black beers & their smoky caramelness! Be it southern style Monteiths Black, Tooheys old, etc. or Northern Style Old Peculiar, various porters, old & xmas ales. Nice after a warm day in the garden (weird after we had snow on friday/saturday)

Tonight - a cheapo Barolo, so not expecting much.

Ian

Anonymous

Post by Anonymous »

<b>2001 Lark Hill Canberra Shiraz</b>: The colour has deepened in the past few years to be more of a traditional purple, compared to the light red of 2002. Beautiful nose of spice and berries. The palate was of complex dark cherries, blackberry and liquorice. Great stuff. Suited Irish stew to a tea.

<b>2002 Allandale Verdelho</b>: Still a light straw colour with plenty of freshness. The palate was of tropical fruits, especially pineapple. This will go for a few more years yet. My favourite verdelho.

<b>1999 Chris Rolf Shiraz Grenache</b>: Aged brick colour with a strong nose of spice. The palate was dark fruits and the typical grenache spice. The finish was a bit drying and this wine is probably just past its peak.

To Orange I go next week. Thanks for all the input guys.

George Krashos
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Post by George Krashos »

Well, the last of the wife's 30th birthday celebrations saw us hosting a Sunday lunch for 12 people.

With the appetiser, blue cheese pastry puffs we had Krug NV brought along by a generous friend. Bready and full, it had great acidity and wasn't 'fat', generating great mouthfeel. Second time I've had this and wish I'd won Lotto on the weekend to have it more regularly. A cracker.

Entree was crab souffle with rocket salad. I'd managed to source two bottles of Henri Bredif Vouvray 1985 and had high hopes. Double decanted early in the morning and then put in the fridge, they had some initial sulpur on the nose which blew off revealing a gorgeous nose that was all honey. Solid acidic backbone and lots of lush fruit, this was my wine of the day and a real eye opener. I have to buy some decent vouvray and put it away for a while. Really enjoyable and complemented the food fabulously.

Main was duck cassoulet that my wife had slaved over for several days. A tour de force it was well-matched to the Chateau Montrose 1975 in magnum and my second bottle of Burge and Wilson Cabernet 1975 (again, thank to Mark!). The B&W was wonderful, with great fruit, not the slightest hint of drying out and a genuine cabernet nose. It didn't change much even after an hour - first sip to last sip was great but it didn't 'evolve' much. The Montrose was another beast entirely. A strange iodine nose at the start, this baby hit its straps about 2-3 hours after being decanted. Initially a tad hard and lean (and tannic thanks to vintage) it underwent an awesome transformation as the fruit poked its head out and then became a silky, volumptuous drink. Long on the palate, the fruit and tannin finally came into balance and it became a great drink. Thankfully we had a magnum of the stuff - the second and third glasses were by far superior to the first. A lesson on letting wine (even old wine) show what it can do over time in the glass.

As everyone was still thirsty, we then cracked a Rockford SVS Moorooroo 1996. A huge change of pace, this had a tar nose and dark, thick fruit. After the nuances of the Montrose it was tough to make much out of it other than to make a mental note to not drink any others for a long while. It had ripe fruit and tannin in good balance but was just too big to drink by itself. I was told it had no new oak (which showed) and thought that a line-up with a 1996 St Henri in about 2015 or so would be an interesting comparison. Have to wait and see.

All in all, a great lunch that was seemingly enjoyed by all.

-- George Krashos

bacchaebabe
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Post by bacchaebabe »

Took some wine along to a friend's dinner but got drunk so quickly, tasting notes were not an option. Therfore, just the list is:

1994 Penfolds Bin 389
1994 Penfolds Bin 407
1998 Maxwell Lime Cave
2002 Mount Mary Chardonnay
2004 Mesh Riesling


Very general impressions were that both the 94 Penfolds were drinking very well. I was expecting the 407 to be not so good but no problems at all in terms of greeness or anything else others have reported.

The Lime Cave was still very purple (from what I could see in the dark) and still quite young with a few years ahead of it. Only had a slurp of the Chardonnay and just remember melon and peach but very fresh and got lots of good comments from my friends. Have posted on the Mesh many times and didn't actually have any from this bottle.

Also had a 94 Wither Hills Savignon Blanc on staurday night and this really has the goods. Very fresh and clean gooseberries and passionfruit and this is exactly what I like in a sav blanc. Great stuff.
Cheers,
Kris

There's a fine wine between pleasure and pain
(Stolen from the graffiti in the ladies loos at Pegasus Bay winery)

Sean
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Sean
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Kieran
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Post by Kieran »

bacchaebabe wrote:Also had a 94 Wither Hills Savignon Blanc on staurday night and this really has the goods. Very fresh and clean gooseberries and passionfruit and this is exactly what I like in a sav blanc. Great stuff.


Really? A 94?

Kieran
"In the wine of life, some of us are destined to be cork sniffers." - Dilbert

Petros
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Post by Petros »

Maygars Hill Shiraz 2002
The wine was very dark with nice clean flavours of dark fruit and soft oak.It has a good round mouth feel with good length.

Langehorne Creek Area Blend 1995
This wine always satisfies . It has lively fruit and and mint on the nose, and the blend has intergrated over time into a lovely seamless wine

Sean
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Red Bigot
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Post by Red Bigot »

Sean wrote:
Red Bigot wrote:We were sprung by Ian Summerfield tasting his shiraz grapes and taking photos


So Brian, you were caught red-handed.


:lol: Indeed, but not as red / black as Mark's were when we got to the winery.
Cheers
Brian
Life's too short to drink white wine and red wine is better for you too! :-)

bacchaebabe
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Post by bacchaebabe »

Kieran wrote:
bacchaebabe wrote:Also had a 94 Wither Hills Savignon Blanc on staurday night and this really has the goods. Very fresh and clean gooseberries and passionfruit and this is exactly what I like in a sav blanc. Great stuff.


Really? A 94?

Kieran


Mmmmm, maybe it was a 04. I told you I was drunk!
Cheers,
Kris

There's a fine wine between pleasure and pain
(Stolen from the graffiti in the ladies loos at Pegasus Bay winery)

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