Martin Phillipson wrote:Just my 2c worth. Had a delicious Roxburgh 1997 about a month ago. Wonderfully mature stuff, lots of butterscotch and coffee (yes coffee) on the nose, but still some fruit and enough acid to not make it too much of a struggle to drink more than 1 glass. Wouldn't cellar it much longer tho.
The 2001 is a welcome return to form for a wine that IMO has generally underimpressed and overoaked! 
So maybe the 7 year rule is correct Chickpea.
MP
IMO the 97 Roxburgh is one of the better ones of this line, not overdone the way other vintages have been (the 96 was a shocker).
I've had a few aged chardys this weekend, apologies for lack of notes:
95 Brown Bros Family Reserve, which was getting tired but still very classy: would have drunk this at its peak two years ago;
94 Penfolds Bin 94A, which had gone quite golden but was still excellent with food
98 Cullen last night, and it is indeed a lovely drink and at its peak for mine.  much more a European style than the others, and built to age a bit.  This was toasted nuts and struck match on the nose, and superripe peach with a lemon lime finish.
Were any of these better for being aged?  The Brown Bros wasnt, the 94A maybe, and the Culen was an improvement.
Cheers
Andrew