The toast of the world: Barossa Shiraz awarded two coveted international gold medals
http://www.abc.net.au/news/rural/2017-0 ... s_adelaide
This is a "Zombie" label made for Woolworths owned liquor outlets.
The wine may be OK but still hyped up.
The toast of the world: Barossa Shiraz awarded two coveted international gold medals
Mahmoud Ali wrote:Matt@5453 wrote: ... my sediments exactly, like you said a relative small spread of producers. Steven Pannell gets quite a mention also.
An intentional pun? At the very least a happy coincidence I'd say.
Matt@5453 wrote:Mahmoud Ali wrote:Matt@5453 wrote: ... my sediments exactly, like you said a relative small spread of producers. Steven Pannell gets quite a mention also.
An intentional pun? At the very least a happy coincidence I'd say.
not sure what you are referring to . my sediments: I agree with SJW, its an odd list
crusty2 wrote:The toast of the world: Barossa Shiraz awarded two coveted international gold medals
http://www.abc.net.au/news/rural/2017-0 ... s_adelaide
This is a "Zombie" label made for Woolworths owned liquor outlets.
The wine may be OK but still hyped up.
JamieBahrain wrote:Always felt there was a massive market for a $20 Barossa shiraz delevering the region in a bottle with some fanfare. Like a poor man's Basket Press in concept but not quality.
sjw_11 wrote:Given it has already been mentioned in another thread, I thought we should include one of the pushes for "Italy’s Best Red" (as this email was headlined):
"Luca Maroni is like Italy’s version of James Halliday, revered as the definitive wine critic on all Italian wines.
When Luca Maroni says that “this is the best red wine tasted this year”, there is a stampede by lovers of Italian wine for his recommendation.
Luca Maroni has rated the Farnese Edizione Cinque Autoctoni (15th edition) 99 points (and we don’t believe that he has ever rated a wine higher - ever). As always we have the lowest price around (and given its pedigree it is a bargain buy on a world scale), yours for… "
Bobthebuilder wrote:For,......?
Just tell them the price son!
I need a wine that "punches me in the feels".sjw_11 wrote:Oh my word...
"Dear Samuel,
What makes a great wine?
Some are thought-provoking, cerebral affairs. The kind to natter over for an hour, lost in conversation amongst a group of friends.
Others, more perfunctory - wines for the moment. That kind where place and mindset matter most. Being one and without care for the world. Lost in the land, the history, the now.
Then there are great wines of the future. The young, unfurled prima donna that hasn't quite found its stride yet. Destined for the cellar where a long sleep awaits, to unearth potential wisdom, maturity and hopefully greatness - all for a later date.
Finally, there are those that come along only ever so often and punch you smack-bang, directly in the feels. A wine, not necessarily of enormity, or one that requires a deep knowledge of the subject, the history and terroir, but one of substance. Of truth. Of ultimate greatness. Delicious now. Unparalleled. Exuberant. Full of vitality and presence. A wine that makes you rediscover why you fell in love with this whole caper in the first place.
That wine for me, and those who work here, who tasted it together, is (and was) the 2015 Dog Point Pinot Noir. The finest yet produced from this estate, and a new benchmark for what can be achieved from the usually Sauvignon centric Marlborough.
It strikes you. Out of nowhere. A punch of Pinot flavour. It tastes otherworldly, but assured. Knowing its place, but then bending the rules. That it's from Marlborough, let alone Otago, Martinborough or dare-I-say-it, Burgundy the ultimate surprise. It is a thirst quencher; satiating the appetite for great Pinot, and affordability. Stalky, crunchy, moreish. Rose, raspberry, chinotto and plums. Chocolate, grippy tannins finishing with power and poise. Oak that is handled perfectly. For lovers of Pinot, you will rarely find a wine of this ilk. For the occasional passing Pinot fans - then let this be the one wine to finally snare you in. I implore you. This will not be a wine you regret purchasing anytime soon."
Michael McNally wrote:
I need a wine that "punches me in the feels".
oh my goodness. This thread can be stopped now, as this quote cannot POSSIBLY be beaten. I would be embarrassed if this was talking about a bottle of recently released La Tache, or RC (although that is harder to taste when young).sjw_11 wrote:Oh my word...
"Dear Samuel,
What makes a great wine?
Some are thought-provoking, cerebral affairs. The kind to natter over for an hour, lost in conversation amongst a group of friends.
Others, more perfunctory - wines for the moment. That kind where place and mindset matter most. Being one and without care for the world. Lost in the land, the history, the now.
Then there are great wines of the future. The young, unfurled prima donna that hasn't quite found its stride yet. Destined for the cellar where a long sleep awaits, to unearth potential wisdom, maturity and hopefully greatness - all for a later date.
Finally, there are those that come along only ever so often and punch you smack-bang, directly in the feels. A wine, not necessarily of enormity, or one that requires a deep knowledge of the subject, the history and terroir, but one of substance. Of truth. Of ultimate greatness. Delicious now. Unparalleled. Exuberant. Full of vitality and presence. A wine that makes you rediscover why you fell in love with this whole caper in the first place.
That wine for me, and those who work here, who tasted it together, is (and was) the 2015 Dog Point Pinot Noir. The finest yet produced from this estate, and a new benchmark for what can be achieved from the usually Sauvignon centric Marlborough.
It strikes you. Out of nowhere. A punch of Pinot flavour. It tastes otherworldly, but assured. Knowing its place, but then bending the rules. That it's from Marlborough, let alone Otago, Martinborough or dare-I-say-it, Burgundy the ultimate surprise. It is a thirst quencher; satiating the appetite for great Pinot, and affordability. Stalky, crunchy, moreish. Rose, raspberry, chinotto and plums. Chocolate, grippy tannins finishing with power and poise. Oak that is handled perfectly. For lovers of Pinot, you will rarely find a wine of this ilk. For the occasional passing Pinot fans - then let this be the one wine to finally snare you in. I implore you. This will not be a wine you regret purchasing anytime soon."
I'll give the retailer some credit though, at least it wasn't just a spewforth of points...which is pretty much all most wine emails contain nowadays. Appears that he/she has at least tasted the wine they are trying to sell, and are standing by their impressions.felixp21 wrote:oh my goodness. This thread can be stopped now, as this quote cannot POSSIBLY be beaten. I would be embarrassed if this was talking about a bottle of recently released La Tache, or RC (although that is harder to taste when young).sjw_11 wrote:Oh my word...
"Dear Samuel,
What makes a great wine?
Some are thought-provoking, cerebral affairs. The kind to natter over for an hour, lost in conversation amongst a group of friends.
Others, more perfunctory - wines for the moment. That kind where place and mindset matter most. Being one and without care for the world. Lost in the land, the history, the now.
Then there are great wines of the future. The young, unfurled prima donna that hasn't quite found its stride yet. Destined for the cellar where a long sleep awaits, to unearth potential wisdom, maturity and hopefully greatness - all for a later date.
Finally, there are those that come along only ever so often and punch you smack-bang, directly in the feels. A wine, not necessarily of enormity, or one that requires a deep knowledge of the subject, the history and terroir, but one of substance. Of truth. Of ultimate greatness. Delicious now. Unparalleled. Exuberant. Full of vitality and presence. A wine that makes you rediscover why you fell in love with this whole caper in the first place.
That wine for me, and those who work here, who tasted it together, is (and was) the 2015 Dog Point Pinot Noir. The finest yet produced from this estate, and a new benchmark for what can be achieved from the usually Sauvignon centric Marlborough.
It strikes you. Out of nowhere. A punch of Pinot flavour. It tastes otherworldly, but assured. Knowing its place, but then bending the rules. That it's from Marlborough, let alone Otago, Martinborough or dare-I-say-it, Burgundy the ultimate surprise. It is a thirst quencher; satiating the appetite for great Pinot, and affordability. Stalky, crunchy, moreish. Rose, raspberry, chinotto and plums. Chocolate, grippy tannins finishing with power and poise. Oak that is handled perfectly. For lovers of Pinot, you will rarely find a wine of this ilk. For the occasional passing Pinot fans - then let this be the one wine to finally snare you in. I implore you. This will not be a wine you regret purchasing anytime soon."
Like many on this site, I have seen this wine, twice as I recall, and in it is an ok wine, not bad, around 88pts for me. This guy and his description makes David White's drivel assessing Greenock Creek wines positively mundane.
Surely, this guy wakes up in the morning, gets a hot flush, feels nauseated, and thinks to himself "oh god, did I really write that?
And we wonder how the term "wine wanker" evolved!!!!!
Was there a street fight to follow Sam?sjw_11 wrote:"Over 10 years on and these wines are singing- like the studious understudy, they have bided their time in the background to finally steal the show with a last minute appearance. The conservative Mark Darcy, stealing our hearts from the flash Daniel Cleaver.
To labour this tortured analogy even more, like Colin Firth, 2006 is a classic. By dint of the cooler year, the wine produced is more reminiscent of what we know as ‘claret’, with the finely balanced aromas of graphite, cedar and cassis which have identified the best of the breed for generations."
(FYI flogging 2006 Latour).
chateau Merde de Bovine?sjw_11 wrote:Oh dear,
‘...the intensity of the mature layers of dark chocolate, tobacco, black truffles from Vaucluse and a melancholy hiking in the moist autumn forest is, at least, impressive. The mousse may struggle to reach the surface of the glycerol rich essence of wine. Nevertheless, it tingles of lust on the tongue when stringency, chalk and jingling pure acids dance over the finish line.’
96 points, Richard Juhlin
anyone want to guess what the wine is?