Come in spinner - it's Sunday and day of the 3nd Test

The place on the web to chat about wine, Australian wines, or any other wines for that matter
Post Reply
TORB
Posts: 2493
Joined: Mon Aug 04, 2003 3:42 pm
Location: Bowral NSW
Contact:

Come in spinner - it's Sunday and day of the 3nd Test

Post by TORB »

and your drinking reports are now due too. What have you been drinking whilst watching the cricket? And for those not at the cricket, all the social events at this time of the year.
Cheers
Ric
TORBWine

wolf
Posts: 36
Joined: Tue Nov 28, 2006 2:06 pm

Post by wolf »

2001 Wynns Black Label: Had a bottle of this 6 months ago and thought it was excellent. Seems to have developed very quickly though and lost a fair bit of its fruit. Could have been a bad bottle though.

2004 Howard Park Leston: Very tight and closed. Slowly opened up but after 4 hours was still a concentrated little bomb in the mouth. Heaps of potential though.

Ian S
Posts: 2699
Joined: Sat Aug 23, 2003 3:21 am
Location: Norwich, England

Post by Ian S »

Only vague recollections as no notes taken.

Starting white - didn't even notice the grape, country or producer :oops: :roll:

Lustau Oloroso sherry - quite an old one and very impressive with nibbles and then warm tapas. Interesting returning to it between courses, how it very much worked with the food (and less so without it).

Jean Leon Cabernet 1979. A surprisingly large bottling run for a wine of that style (very much a tannic cellaring wine). IIRC something like 200,000 bottles, plus assorted magnums, double magnums etc. The wine was amazingly fresh, with very bright red fruits on nose and palate. Tannins were prominent and on it's own showed as an imbalance. However with food (pork & orange casserole - a bad description of a very good dish) the tannins were perfectly masked and the wine shone through. An able demonstration of the symbiosis between certain food & wine.

Torres Gran Reserva (BLack label) 1989 I think. Very impressive, perfectly balanced.

Interestingly neither of the above two were noticeably concentrated, but the quality of the fruit was very fine in both cases.

Fonseca Guimarens Port 1995 - Fine, no great analysis required, just very pleasing to drink

Sorry for the lack of detail - discussion focussed on other things than the wine which I guess us wine geeks should remember to do more often :wink:

regards

Ian

Mike Hawkins
Posts: 2747
Joined: Fri Aug 29, 2003 9:39 am

Post by Mike Hawkins »

1998 Dom Perignon - much better than the last bottle. Bready / nutty aroma, nice ripe fruit with great length. Not quite as good as the 90 and 96, but up there with the 95 IMO.

1999 Moet et Chandon - initial nose of chlorine which stuck around for about 30 mins. I had low expectations by this time, but the palate was fine. Not a great wine but a decent quaffing bubbly.

1986 Chateau Montrose - I'm losing patience with this wine. The nose is awesome - forest, earth, caramel and cigarettes characteristics leap from the glass. But unfortunately, the palate is (still) overwhelmed by iron-like tannins. Will it ever come into balance ? Not so sure.

1996 Chateau d"Yquem - the first time I've tried this vintage, and much better than the charts would have me believe. The nose was a little more closed than I anticipated, but one sip and my taste buds were swamped with marmalaide, dried apricots and caramel. The finish went on and on. And its still just a pup....

User avatar
GRB
Posts: 386
Joined: Thu Sep 15, 2005 1:59 pm
Location: Sydney

Post by GRB »

Woodstock The Stocks 1996
Just as an aged shiraz should be, lovely balance and length showing excellent aged characters. Seemed like it was only 600ml bottle though :?

Seppelts Original Sparkling Shiraz 2004
My first try of the new vintage and I was mighty impressed. Still quite primary but a little more in the savoury spectrum than the 02. I think I like this one slightly more. Note to self stock up big time for the summer months :D

Glen
Winner of the inaugural RB cork-count competition
Runner up RB-NTDIR competition
Runner up TORB TN competition
Leave of absence second RB c-c competition

User avatar
KMP
Posts: 1246
Joined: Sat Apr 17, 2004 4:02 am
Location: Expat, now in San Diego, California
Contact:

Post by KMP »

Just a couple of Burings Pinot Noirs 2004, and 2005!

Mike
Last edited by KMP on Tue Dec 19, 2006 4:51 am, edited 1 time in total.

User avatar
n4sir
Posts: 4020
Joined: Mon Dec 15, 2003 10:53 pm
Location: Adelaide

Post by n4sir »

We had a huge range of wines last Saturday, at the final informal Blacktongues meet of the year.

Highlights were a rare magnum of the 2002 Massena Howling Dog Durif (glass staining, huge plummy fruit, tannin and spicy oak, all impossibly young and impeccably balanced), a 1998 Cimicky Reserve Shiraz, and a 1996 The Wilson Vineyard Polish Hill Riesling to kick off the evening.

The low point was two bottles of 1994 Orlando Centenary Hill from yours truly, the first oxidized to hell, and the second past it. I've had both since release in perfect cellaring conditions, the levels well into the neck, the capsules spinning and the corks look perfect, yet both were completely buggered. :?

Maybe they Orlando should rename Centenary Hill, "Over the Hill" - in my current mood I've sworn never to buy it again. :evil:

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

User avatar
DJ
Posts: 452
Joined: Fri Aug 15, 2003 12:42 pm
Location: Sydney
Contact:

Post by DJ »

Piper Heidsieck NV - wow for drinking pleasure for the money in bubbles hard to beat. Toasty richness - may have a touch of added sweetness but who cares. My inclination to heap surpurlatives on it is tempered by how little good bubbles I've been drinking.

1996 Penfolds St Henri - okay but a somewhat flat bottle - no obvious TCA but the cork smelt rather woody. Hope the next nes are better.
David J

Drink no longer water, but use a little wine for thy stomach's sake 1Ti 5:23

Nayan
Posts: 504
Joined: Fri Nov 05, 2004 9:59 pm
Location: Kazakhstan

Post by Nayan »

Just a few this week. All very nice apart from the Eiswein, which I was expecting more incisiveness from (but I suppose that's Scheurebe for you)

NV Venue Amiot Brut
NV Pol Roger
NV Egly-Ouriet VV

2004 Tarrington Chardonnay

1999 Dei Vino Nobile di Montepulciano
2004 Wynns Black Label
2004(?) Massena Howling Wolf Durif

2004 Weltachs Scheurebe Eiswein

Sean
Posts: 1421
Joined: Tue Aug 19, 2003 11:32 am

Post by Sean »

deleted
Last edited by Sean on Tue Jan 30, 2007 2:01 pm, edited 1 time in total.

Ian S
Posts: 2699
Joined: Sat Aug 23, 2003 3:21 am
Location: Norwich, England

Post by Ian S »

Nayan wrote:Just a few this week. All very nice apart from the Eiswein, which I was expecting more incisiveness from (but I suppose that's Scheurebe for you)

NV Venue Amiot Brut
NV Pol Roger
NV Egly-Ouriet VV

2004 Tarrington Chardonnay

1999 Dei Vino Nobile di Montepulciano
2004 Wynns Black Label
2004(?) Massena Howling Wolf Durif

2004 Weltachs Scheurebe Eiswein

Nayan
How did you find the Vino Nobile di Montepulciano? A very good vintage and a wine style right up my street, so would be something I'd expect to like.

regards
Ian

Nayan
Posts: 504
Joined: Fri Nov 05, 2004 9:59 pm
Location: Kazakhstan

Post by Nayan »

Ian S wrote:How did you find the Vino Nobile di Montepulciano? A very good vintage and a wine style right up my street, so would be something I'd expect to like.

regards
Ian

Ian,

I'll admit that I have only had a handful of Vini Nobile di Montepulciano, so don't have much experience to compare styles, but here goes:

The tannins while firm, were quite supple; the acidity was a touch lower than I would have liked; had good flavours of spice, plums and cherries, though maybe a touch too jammy for my taste. Much more integrated than the bottle I had about 18 months ago. Drinking well now and probably will continue to do so for another 5 years, but why wait.

I found this more forward than other Vini Nobile di Montepulciano I have tried; and I think I still have such an "old world" palate, that I prefer the more rustic styles.

Very well made wine though.

Picked up for AU$30 a bottle about 2 years ago. Definitely worth buying at that price.

Regards,

Nayan

User avatar
Bert Werden
Posts: 19
Joined: Fri May 26, 2006 1:34 pm
Location: Sunny Melbourne
Contact:

Post by Bert Werden »

DJ wrote:Piper Heidsieck NV - wow for drinking pleasure for the money in bubbles hard to beat. Toasty richness - may have a touch of added sweetness but who cares. My inclination to heap surpurlatives on it is tempered by how little good bubbles I've been drinking.


Agree, this is good juice for the money, the key being freshness otherwise pass on it.

Post Reply