Sunday Weekly Drinking Reports 25/11/2012
Sunday Weekly Drinking Reports 25/11/2012
It's been a good week for wine drinking for me this week - what have you opened?
Working backwards, last night we very much enjoyed a 2006 Hoddles Creek Estate Chardonnay (13.2% A/V, S/C, 92 points, drink now - 2020+). Still relatively infantile with only a bright pale straw/light lemon colour, holding a remarkably tight persona and just starting to emerge from a long slumber. There's an understated and refined class with Franco D'Anna's Chardonnay's and this startling good example continues to the beat of the same drum. Restrained but gorgeously integrated aromas and flavours of green honeydew melon, fig and grapefruit mesh seamlessly with racy/mealy/spicy French oak and wonderfully-judged mouthquenching, mineral-tinged acidity. The wine now has fleshed out a little since release but is true to Franco's thumbprint of tightly coiled, linear, ageworthy Chardonnay. Envoking similarities to a fine Puligny-Montrachet, the sustained finish of this wine reiterates the theme found throughout - focussed, forever unfolding and perplexing. A top effort. An under $20 and with this complexity and quality - you've gotta be kiddin' me.
Friday, I opened another bottle of 1998 Jamieson's Run Coonawarra Reserve Cabernet Sauvignon (13.5% A/V, Cork, 90 points, drink now - 2016) - a wine I tried recently and thought had reached its zenith. In a way, I'm pleased to report this bottle was far fresher with a more youthful and vibrant colour ruby colour, more pronounced black fruits and an appealing vein of Coonawarra's famous mint. I mentioned, "in a way", because now I have bottle variation issues and constant unreliabilty with any wine is not a situation I enjoy. So now I have to drink the remaining bottles to determine the frequency of the problem. Oh well, $%^& happens! FWIW, the wine was excellent, the only criticism being a slight excess of vanillin/chocolatey oak.
Thursday afternoon at our weekly jazz band gig, we enjoyed a 2008 Brindabella Hills Shiraz (14% A/V, S/C, 91 points, drink 2015 - 2023) - a terrific example and most likely worthy of a higher rating once its seen more time in bottle. Loaded with high class, ripe, fleshy fruit from a great vintage in the Canberra District, this outstanding red possesses all the hallmarks for future success, harbouring integrated lively acidity and complimentary seasoned oak before finishing with ripe fine tannins and a decadently long departure. This wine impressed me more than Tyrrell's 2008 Canberra District Shiraz I opened last week.
Wednesday night with a family get together that included a visit from my mum's siter and brother-in-law, we cracked a mature, but mildly disappointing for the vintage, offering from Jim Barry, their 2002 Lodge Hill Riesling (very good, 87 points, S/C, drink now) and an excellent bottle of red burgundy from Robert Chevillon, his 1995 premier cru, "Les Vaucrains" (Cork, 90 points, drink now). I thought this bottle of Lodge Hill just on the slippery slope although the others at the table seemed to like it more. Another bottle opened a while back seemed fresher and far more enticing. The Chevillon offered up a mature elegance on a platform of softening plum and cherry fruit with sous bois and delicate mushroom notes added complexity to a long and smooth wine on the palate. Nothing startling but in a very good place. 1995 is not my favourite red burgundy vintage. Over the years, I've generally found it lacking in fruit.
Working backwards, last night we very much enjoyed a 2006 Hoddles Creek Estate Chardonnay (13.2% A/V, S/C, 92 points, drink now - 2020+). Still relatively infantile with only a bright pale straw/light lemon colour, holding a remarkably tight persona and just starting to emerge from a long slumber. There's an understated and refined class with Franco D'Anna's Chardonnay's and this startling good example continues to the beat of the same drum. Restrained but gorgeously integrated aromas and flavours of green honeydew melon, fig and grapefruit mesh seamlessly with racy/mealy/spicy French oak and wonderfully-judged mouthquenching, mineral-tinged acidity. The wine now has fleshed out a little since release but is true to Franco's thumbprint of tightly coiled, linear, ageworthy Chardonnay. Envoking similarities to a fine Puligny-Montrachet, the sustained finish of this wine reiterates the theme found throughout - focussed, forever unfolding and perplexing. A top effort. An under $20 and with this complexity and quality - you've gotta be kiddin' me.
Friday, I opened another bottle of 1998 Jamieson's Run Coonawarra Reserve Cabernet Sauvignon (13.5% A/V, Cork, 90 points, drink now - 2016) - a wine I tried recently and thought had reached its zenith. In a way, I'm pleased to report this bottle was far fresher with a more youthful and vibrant colour ruby colour, more pronounced black fruits and an appealing vein of Coonawarra's famous mint. I mentioned, "in a way", because now I have bottle variation issues and constant unreliabilty with any wine is not a situation I enjoy. So now I have to drink the remaining bottles to determine the frequency of the problem. Oh well, $%^& happens! FWIW, the wine was excellent, the only criticism being a slight excess of vanillin/chocolatey oak.
Thursday afternoon at our weekly jazz band gig, we enjoyed a 2008 Brindabella Hills Shiraz (14% A/V, S/C, 91 points, drink 2015 - 2023) - a terrific example and most likely worthy of a higher rating once its seen more time in bottle. Loaded with high class, ripe, fleshy fruit from a great vintage in the Canberra District, this outstanding red possesses all the hallmarks for future success, harbouring integrated lively acidity and complimentary seasoned oak before finishing with ripe fine tannins and a decadently long departure. This wine impressed me more than Tyrrell's 2008 Canberra District Shiraz I opened last week.
Wednesday night with a family get together that included a visit from my mum's siter and brother-in-law, we cracked a mature, but mildly disappointing for the vintage, offering from Jim Barry, their 2002 Lodge Hill Riesling (very good, 87 points, S/C, drink now) and an excellent bottle of red burgundy from Robert Chevillon, his 1995 premier cru, "Les Vaucrains" (Cork, 90 points, drink now). I thought this bottle of Lodge Hill just on the slippery slope although the others at the table seemed to like it more. Another bottle opened a while back seemed fresher and far more enticing. The Chevillon offered up a mature elegance on a platform of softening plum and cherry fruit with sous bois and delicate mushroom notes added complexity to a long and smooth wine on the palate. Nothing startling but in a very good place. 1995 is not my favourite red burgundy vintage. Over the years, I've generally found it lacking in fruit.
Last edited by dlo on Sun Nov 25, 2012 6:34 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Cheers,
David
David
Re: Sunday Weekly Drinking Reports 25/11/2012
deleted
Last edited by Sean on Mon Mar 11, 2013 5:06 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Sunday Weekly Drinking Reports 25/11/2012
2005 Hewitson Mad Hatter: I fear this is fading. The fruit seems AWOL on this one and the alcohol is really showing through. Luckily I have only two bottles left. Not a long termer. 5 years ago this was one of my first 'serious' wine purchases. Probably hasn't turned out to be the keeper I thought it might be.
Re: Sunday Weekly Drinking Reports 25/11/2012
05 Mills Reef 'One' Drinking so well at the moment. Nicely integrated, dark long. A rich wine, gushing flavour. Yummy
10 Cloudy Bay Sauvignon. Really good, it is aging well. Softly spoken, lovely fine acids. No vege, aspargas, grass or herbs just great fruit. Impressed
05 Te Mata Coleraine. Drinking really well at the moment. Not a big Coleraine and quite red fruit driven
07 Te Mata Awatea. Perhaps in 2-5 years time this will be even better than the 05 Coleraine. it is more bdx like with its wicked graphite and pencil lead edge. Need to meld a bit more and not quite the texture of the Coleraine but that could well come with time. Sublime vfm
10 Cloudy Bay Sauvignon. Really good, it is aging well. Softly spoken, lovely fine acids. No vege, aspargas, grass or herbs just great fruit. Impressed
05 Te Mata Coleraine. Drinking really well at the moment. Not a big Coleraine and quite red fruit driven
07 Te Mata Awatea. Perhaps in 2-5 years time this will be even better than the 05 Coleraine. it is more bdx like with its wicked graphite and pencil lead edge. Need to meld a bit more and not quite the texture of the Coleraine but that could well come with time. Sublime vfm
Re: Sunday Weekly Drinking Reports 25/11/2012
Wynns Black Label 2002... Cork. From my cellar. On opening a wash of black currant confirms this wine remains fighting fit. Its not a super intense nose, emerging a little simple after breathing. The palate is quite drying, perhaps a little green, with moderate oak tannins holding the medium-full bodied structure firmly in place. Drinking quite nicely, I think will mature into more savoury/secondary characters over 2-3yrs. Rating: 1x Cedar Cigar Box.
Briar Ridge "Karl Stockhausen" Chardonnay 2010... S/cap. $15 bin end clearance from cellar door. Fantastic value. Glowing green/yellow, very fresh but complex nose of cashews and melon, followed through with lashings of stone fruit and creamy French oak on the palate. Drink now or over the next 2-yrs. Rating: 1x Great White charger.
Yarra Burn "Blanc de Blanc" 2007 Vintage... Cork. Fresh, clean and crisp. Very nice drinking.
Briar Ridge "Karl Stockhausen" Chardonnay 2010... S/cap. $15 bin end clearance from cellar door. Fantastic value. Glowing green/yellow, very fresh but complex nose of cashews and melon, followed through with lashings of stone fruit and creamy French oak on the palate. Drink now or over the next 2-yrs. Rating: 1x Great White charger.
Yarra Burn "Blanc de Blanc" 2007 Vintage... Cork. Fresh, clean and crisp. Very nice drinking.
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Sam
Sam
Re: Sunday Weekly Drinking Reports 25/11/2012
Well the silly season has started and we are into the craziness of multiple invitations and lunches
Was fortunate enough to go to a vendor lunch on Friday down at Kingsley's Woolloomooloo and indulged in the following
2003 Meerea Park Hell Hole Shiraz This was a solid offering starting out as a well rounded wine. Still plenty of fruit, typical Hunter nose and softening tannin. Was in a very good spot and would hold for a few more years yet.
2010 Torbreck Struie A massive change from Hunter to Barossa. Big fruit bomb style with plenty of oak supporting it. However soft mouth feel and integrated tannin - will see a lot of years in the cellar
1996 Rockford Cabernet Sauvignon x 2 These wines were stunning to say the least - not so much for the complexity but the lack of age they had on them. Both were only just starting to brick on the rim and were as fresh and full of fruit. I believe this wine has come off 5 year old vines at the time? It was surprising to see a wine at this age travelling so well
2011 Felton Rd Bannockburn Pinot Noir The first Felton Rd I have had the pleasure of drinking. This had a powerful floral nose and quite plush in the mouth. A pleasure to be able to drink this.
Palate cleansers were 4 pines Kolsch and this is an excellent beer
Was fortunate enough to go to a vendor lunch on Friday down at Kingsley's Woolloomooloo and indulged in the following
2003 Meerea Park Hell Hole Shiraz This was a solid offering starting out as a well rounded wine. Still plenty of fruit, typical Hunter nose and softening tannin. Was in a very good spot and would hold for a few more years yet.
2010 Torbreck Struie A massive change from Hunter to Barossa. Big fruit bomb style with plenty of oak supporting it. However soft mouth feel and integrated tannin - will see a lot of years in the cellar
1996 Rockford Cabernet Sauvignon x 2 These wines were stunning to say the least - not so much for the complexity but the lack of age they had on them. Both were only just starting to brick on the rim and were as fresh and full of fruit. I believe this wine has come off 5 year old vines at the time? It was surprising to see a wine at this age travelling so well
2011 Felton Rd Bannockburn Pinot Noir The first Felton Rd I have had the pleasure of drinking. This had a powerful floral nose and quite plush in the mouth. A pleasure to be able to drink this.
Palate cleansers were 4 pines Kolsch and this is an excellent beer
Re: Sunday Weekly Drinking Reports 25/11/2012
Not much in the way of TN, but had the following "bbq" wines last night.
96 Hollick Cabernet Merlot
Showed as a little bit tired, but still an enjoyable drink,
98 Penfolds Bin 128 Shiraz
Really hitting its straps, great colour, good complexity, nice mouthfeel, mix of good fruit and some aged characters
91 Lindemans St George Cabernet Sauvignon
I think this was a good old bottle example of the St G. Good colour, fruit, complexity,
73 Mildara Cabernet Sauvignon
Still good colour, past it but still hanging in there. Some fruit, leathery notes
96 Hollick Cabernet Merlot
Showed as a little bit tired, but still an enjoyable drink,
98 Penfolds Bin 128 Shiraz
Really hitting its straps, great colour, good complexity, nice mouthfeel, mix of good fruit and some aged characters
91 Lindemans St George Cabernet Sauvignon
I think this was a good old bottle example of the St G. Good colour, fruit, complexity,
73 Mildara Cabernet Sauvignon
Still good colour, past it but still hanging in there. Some fruit, leathery notes
veni, vidi, bibi
also on twitter @m_j_short
and instagram m_j_short
also on twitter @m_j_short
and instagram m_j_short
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Re: Sunday Weekly Drinking Reports 25/11/2012
dlo wrote: Friday, I opened another bottle of 1998 Jamieson's Run Coonawarra Reserve Cabernet Sauvignon (13.5% A/V, Cork, 90 points, drink now - 2016) - a wine I tried recently and thought had reached its zenith. In a way, I'm pleased to report this bottle was far fresher with a more youthful and vibrant colour ruby colour, more pronounced black fruits and an appealing vein of Coonawarra's famous mint. I mentioned, "in a way", because now I have bottle variation issues and constant unreliabilty with any wine is not a situation I enjoy. So now I have to drink the remaining bottles to determine the frequency of the problem. Oh well, $%^& happens! FWIW, the wine was excellent, the only criticism being a slight excess of vanillin/chocolatey oak.
It so happens that last Thursday I opened a bottle of 1992 Jamieson's Run, Coonawarra 12.5%. This was a blend of Cabernet, Shiraz, Merlot and Malbec. It was in fine form, plush fruit with a hint of maturity, still dark-coloured with a garnet/brick rim. I suspect that back then Mildara Blass might have had only had one bottling and not any of the reserves, single vineyard and varietal wines but someone else might have something to say about that. It was the Coonawarra blend, the '86 perhaps, that won a Jimmy Watson trophy. Also note that it was "only" 12.5% alcohol/vol.
That night we also had an '89 Chateau d'Angludet, Margaux. My friend and I thought it was the wine of the night (we are Bordeaux fans it must be said) but my partner who is exceedingly unforgiving of high alcohol, raison-fruited wines preferred the Jamieson's Run over the Bordeaux. She once nixed my buying any '01 Saltram No.1 because it was too sweet. Enough said.
For the record we also drank:
N/V Pergola Prosecco, Italy, 11%
1991 Erdener Treppchen Rieling Spatlese, Mosel, 8%
2001 Anciano Gran Reserva Tempranillo, 10 anos, Valdepenas, Spain,
1995 Bolla 'La Poine' Valpollicella Ripassa, Italy, 13.5%
2007 Errazurriz Late Harvest Sauvignon Blanc, Chile
Cheers.............Mahmoud.
Re: Sunday Weekly Drinking Reports 25/11/2012
Couple of recent bottles,
2010 "Dr L" Loosen Riesling Alc8.5%. This really hit the spot in a way which kiwi riesling rarely seems to manage.
Not intented to be profound, this is a low price offering but, I reckon, darn good value. A bit sweet, but not like
kiwi reisling that tastes like it's cane sugar sweet, acid spine under, again not like it came from a chemical supplier,
and genuine riesling flavours that proclaims a cropping rate that does not have volume as the primary goal.
[opps-rant over ]
Improved showing on day two, would keep a while, but why bother? 2011 is already on store shelves. Good plus.
Decided I needed a little extra joy on Friday, so raided cellar stock of;
1998 Te Mata Coleraine. Alc 13.5%. In a very nice place right now. Has mellowed out well, plenty of red/black berryfruit,
good acid for freshness, and the tannins now softened and smooth. Seemed a little darker on day two, still going strong, maybe
a little down on the freshness factor. Very good, Good. In the top ten, for what has been a year with some very nice wines.
cheers jafa
2010 "Dr L" Loosen Riesling Alc8.5%. This really hit the spot in a way which kiwi riesling rarely seems to manage.
Not intented to be profound, this is a low price offering but, I reckon, darn good value. A bit sweet, but not like
kiwi reisling that tastes like it's cane sugar sweet, acid spine under, again not like it came from a chemical supplier,
and genuine riesling flavours that proclaims a cropping rate that does not have volume as the primary goal.
[opps-rant over ]
Improved showing on day two, would keep a while, but why bother? 2011 is already on store shelves. Good plus.
Decided I needed a little extra joy on Friday, so raided cellar stock of;
1998 Te Mata Coleraine. Alc 13.5%. In a very nice place right now. Has mellowed out well, plenty of red/black berryfruit,
good acid for freshness, and the tannins now softened and smooth. Seemed a little darker on day two, still going strong, maybe
a little down on the freshness factor. Very good, Good. In the top ten, for what has been a year with some very nice wines.
cheers jafa
Re: Sunday Weekly Drinking Reports 25/11/2012
opps-rant over]
Rant away, i similarly struggle with alot of Kiwi Riesling for those reasons. Have seen the Dr L about, but yet to buy...will do so next time.
Re: Sunday Weekly Drinking Reports 25/11/2012
Two mid-week red's
Peter Lehman Shiraz 2008... Bottled under cork, destined I suppose for the UK market before being cleared out ex-cellar door. Lovely ripe, intense nose - some may find the saturated liquer plums a little OTP but I love it. Sexy, plush, and yum. I think drinking very well now though will undoubtedly hold for 3-5yrs.
Alpha Box & Dice "Tarot" Grenache 2008... S/cap. One of my new favourite McV producers - making very sexy, fun, interesting wines. This is more McV ripeness than it is "typical" Grenache - all plush, lush fruit. The 15% abv shows itself just a hint, but generally the balance is pretty good. A delicious sweeter fruited/fuller bodied wine that I think is best enjoyed in the next year or two in all its fruity goodness.
Peter Lehman Shiraz 2008... Bottled under cork, destined I suppose for the UK market before being cleared out ex-cellar door. Lovely ripe, intense nose - some may find the saturated liquer plums a little OTP but I love it. Sexy, plush, and yum. I think drinking very well now though will undoubtedly hold for 3-5yrs.
Alpha Box & Dice "Tarot" Grenache 2008... S/cap. One of my new favourite McV producers - making very sexy, fun, interesting wines. This is more McV ripeness than it is "typical" Grenache - all plush, lush fruit. The 15% abv shows itself just a hint, but generally the balance is pretty good. A delicious sweeter fruited/fuller bodied wine that I think is best enjoyed in the next year or two in all its fruity goodness.
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Sam
Sam
Re: Sunday Weekly Drinking Reports 25/11/2012
1998 Te Mata Coleraine. Alc 13.5%. .....good acid for freshness.......maybe
a little down on the freshness factor.....
You are starting to sound like GK
Explain???
Re: Sunday Weekly Drinking Reports 25/11/2012
Craig(NZ) wrote:You are starting to sound like GK
Err.....Ummm.....Errr
Well I did have a conversation with the mentioned gentleman at the Auckland Bdx blends tasting a while
back, and then again, another brief chat at the Waiheke Wine Expo. Guilt by association?
Now.... "Where's my raincoat?"
cheers jafa