Re: Weekly Drinking Thread Commencing 2nd Nov.
Posted: Thu Nov 07, 2013 10:05 pm
dave vino wrote:Moss Wood Chardonnay might worth a look at.
I'll give that a go, thanks mate. Any vintages in particular that stand out?
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dave vino wrote:Moss Wood Chardonnay might worth a look at.
Chuck wrote: These days our 18 year old son is in the mix having developed an expensive habit for aged red wines. I often wonder why we encourged his transition from beer to wine.
Carl
sjw_11 wrote:Chuck wrote: These days our 18 year old son is in the mix having developed an expensive habit for aged red wines. I often wonder why we encourged his transition from beer to wine.
Carl
Think of it as an investment in the future Chuck ... my parents did similar when I was 18 ten years ago and now it is normally me who brings out the great bottles I have been squirrelling away or have bought at auction!
dlo wrote:Just a short report about the bottle I have been imbibing for several weeks. I believe Lindemans Tawny RF1 Solera is quite famous. I purchased a half dozen of this for $17 a bottle from auction a few months back. All the awards on the label - championships, trophies and many gold medals date back to the sixties with the latest awards in the early seventies. This is a beautiful old tawny. It is so easy to sniff and sip. It is so easy to like. It just doesn't want to die. If it was released, say, with an average of 20 years in the sixties, how old does that make it now? Old? Yes, it is old. Yes, it is very bloody good indeed. End of report.
sjw_11 wrote:rooman wrote:David is definitely correct about it being opened too early. All the Grosset Polish Hills really need at least a decade before being opened. I got impatient recently and opened a 2005. It was still incredibly young at 8 years with a slight lime greenish tone in appearance and massive acid. I put it back in the fridge and retried 48 hours later. By this stage the wine had opened up, the colour deepened and the palate filled out. On that basis of the development in the bottle over the two ensuing days i doubt I will bother opening another again inside 5 years.
Thanks for the note on the 2005... I only have the 2011-13 of these in the cellar so will TRY to resist those for at least 10-yrs.
I should point out in defense of my infanticide I dont have a wine fridge here yet, so... even under screw caps the consistent 29o everytime I turn the air conditioning off would probably not facilitate a long and restrained ageing process. Hence, buy, pop and pour on this occasion!
phillisc wrote:dlo wrote:Just a short report about the bottle I have been imbibing for several weeks. I believe Lindemans Tawny RF1 Solera is quite famous. I purchased a half dozen of this for $17 a bottle from auction a few months back. All the awards on the label - championships, trophies and many gold medals date back to the sixties with the latest awards in the early seventies. This is a beautiful old tawny. It is so easy to sniff and sip. It is so easy to like. It just doesn't want to die. If it was released, say, with an average of 20 years in the sixties, how old does that make it now? Old? Yes, it is old. Yes, it is very bloody good indeed. End of report.
David, Just out of interest, I am trying to track down some old Lindemans Muscats and Tokay's, I think they were the white label with the WH2 and DP33. Surprisingly they were in abundance in Adelaide specialist bottle shops 10-20 years ago, but have not seen one for ages. Guess I need need to scour the secondhand market. I take the RF was part of the range.
Cheers
Craig
Bern wrote:Panda 9D wrote:I've had a new shipment of wine so have been trying out the ranges of Head Wines and Michael Hall. Both are making awesome wines and I wouldn't hesitate to buy anything they make. I won't go into detail on them because it would be unseemly, I think.
Jacques-Frederic Mugnier - Nuits Saint Georges Clos des Fourches 2008: This was wine that didn't hit your palate but somehow, miraculously, floated above it. Tasting notes wouldn't do this wine any justice. It's fruit was clean, pure, long and quite difficult to define on the nose as well as the palate. It's tough for me to decide between this and the DRC RSV for pinot of the year. The RSV ticked more boxes but this wine had a mysterious beauty that was utterly pleasurable but impossible to grasp. If you see this, I would recommend you buy it.
Had the Jacques-Frederic Mugnier in July this year and your description is spot on! Absolutely loved it.
Bern
dlo wrote:
The best and oldest blends still come out of Chambers (ridiculously priced at the top end), All Saints (read ditto to Chambers and thensome), Morris (best VFM by a country mile). If you ring David Morris (one of the nicest guys ITB) at the winery, he might still be making the odd bottle of Show Reserve available. I used to get one bottle every couple of years, but I don't know if he still lets any out to the public. Very special stuff, if you can get it. Campbell's may still have a solera barrel that's probably just as good but I have noticed their pricess have gone a bit north, too. Buller's have been liquidating for a while now, so there might be a chance of picking something nice at the right price there.
Good luck.
rooman wrote:dlo wrote:
The best and oldest blends still come out of Chambers (ridiculously priced at the top end), All Saints (read ditto to Chambers and thensome), Morris (best VFM by a country mile). If you ring David Morris (one of the nicest guys ITB) at the winery, he might still be making the odd bottle of Show Reserve available. I used to get one bottle every couple of years, but I don't know if he still lets any out to the public. Very special stuff, if you can get it. Campbell's may still have a solera barrel that's probably just as good but I have noticed their pricess have gone a bit north, too. Buller's have been liquidating for a while now, so there might be a chance of picking something nice at the right price there.
Good luck.
David
We visited Rutherglenn last year on the way to the Macedon Ranges at Christmas. Of all the muscats we tried, I think my favourite was probably Bullers whilst I was probably least impressed with the Campbells. Sadly we didnt manage to get to Morris. We are heading back again however this year and Morris will have to be on the list.
Mark
dlo wrote:rooman wrote:dlo wrote:
The best and oldest blends still come out of Chambers (ridiculously priced at the top end), All Saints (read ditto to Chambers and thensome), Morris (best VFM by a country mile). If you ring David Morris (one of the nicest guys ITB) at the winery, he might still be making the odd bottle of Show Reserve available. I used to get one bottle every couple of years, but I don't know if he still lets any out to the public. Very special stuff, if you can get it. Campbell's may still have a solera barrel that's probably just as good but I have noticed their pricess have gone a bit north, too. Buller's have been liquidating for a while now, so there might be a chance of picking something nice at the right price there.
Good luck.
David
We visited Rutherglenn last year on the way to the Macedon Ranges at Christmas. Of all the muscats we tried, I think my favourite was probably Bullers whilst I was probably least impressed with the Campbells. Sadly we didnt manage to get to Morris. We are heading back again however this year and Morris will have to be on the list.
Mark
Thanks Mark,
Did you get to try the Merchant Prince or Isabella at Campbells? If (anyone thinks) those are good, you should try what they hold back as their "show reserve"! (If, in fact, they hold back such material, these days?) I take it they didn't serve any of the really good stuff at cellar door?
rooman wrote:Sam
I appreciate everyone has different budgets in life but chances are if you are reading and posting on this site then you have The Bug; where you put off replacing the car or the tyres in order to take up your allocation of your favourite wine. If that is the case then I strongly suggest you consider storing your wine collection in a professional wine storage facility rather than buy a wine fridge. You can keep upsizing as your obsession worsens.
Aging wine for your personal enjoyment is to quote The Newroom: "a work in progress but I am in it for the long haul". The wine you are collecting now will form the basis of your collection in 10 or 20 years. More importantly you can not get these years back if the wine is damaged due to heat. Nowadays I operate a small wine fridge for 30-40 bottles with the main wine stored at Kennards. Actually I operate two wine fridges but the second wine was care of a slight marketing mishap by Penfolds years ago (buy $60 worth of wine, get a free wine fridge )
Mark
dlo wrote:Yesterday, band practice was my joint with Victorian jazz musician, Bill Beasley visiting for this weekend's jazz clug gig, expanding our lineup to 5 piece to run through about 20 tunes.
For such an occasion, lunch was "stretched" until 4pm and we quaffed 4 dozen large Tuross rock oysters, downed some sweet, freshly steamed king prawns wrapped in smoked salmon, topped with sour cream, capers, chives, pepper, avacado, red onion and a dash of virgin avacado oil, lemon and tabasco over a mesclun salad and finished proceedings with 100 day grain fed angus scotch fillet, char grilled served with a cheese-topped bacon, onion and potato bake, ratatouille and pan-fried turkish vegetables topped with a garlic yoghurt sauce.
The wines were all sensational. On the back of its performance earlier in the week we drank a remarkably fresh and acid rich 1999 Tyrrell's Vat 1 Semillon (95 points), a majestically smooth and fully resolved but amazingly fruit sweet and complex 1985 Leoville Las Cases (96 points) and finished with the "slouch" of the afternoon .... another gorgeous example of perfectly mature vinosity, the 1998 Peppertree Reserve Coonawarra Cabernet Sauvignon (a mere 94 points!) Needless to say, with lots of laughs and banter, everybody seemed to have a fantastic time.
daz wrote:dlo wrote:Yesterday, band practice was my joint with Victorian jazz musician, Bill Beasley visiting for this weekend's jazz clug gig, expanding our lineup to 5 piece to run through about 20 tunes.
For such an occasion, lunch was "stretched" until 4pm and we quaffed 4 dozen large Tuross rock oysters, downed some sweet, freshly steamed king prawns wrapped in smoked salmon, topped with sour cream, capers, chives, pepper, avacado, red onion and a dash of virgin avacado oil, lemon and tabasco over a mesclun salad and finished proceedings with 100 day grain fed angus scotch fillet, char grilled served with a cheese-topped bacon, onion and potato bake, ratatouille and pan-fried turkish vegetables topped with a garlic yoghurt sauce.
The wines were all sensational. On the back of its performance earlier in the week we drank a remarkably fresh and acid rich 1999 Tyrrell's Vat 1 Semillon (95 points), a majestically smooth and fully resolved but amazingly fruit sweet and complex 1985 Leoville Las Cases (96 points) and finished with the "slouch" of the afternoon .... another gorgeous example of perfectly mature vinosity, the 1998 Peppertree Reserve Coonawarra Cabernet Sauvignon (a mere 94 points!) Needless to say, with lots of laughs and banter, everybody seemed to have a fantastic time.
I've tried to play spoons before. Can I come to band practice?
dlo wrote:
The wines were all sensational. On the back of its performance earlier in the week we drank a remarkably fresh and acid rich 1999 Tyrrell's Vat 1 Semillon (95 points),
rooman wrote:dlo wrote:
The wines were all sensational. On the back of its performance earlier in the week we drank a remarkably fresh and acid rich 1999 Tyrrell's Vat 1 Semillon (95 points),
David
I still have part of case of the '99. I was amazed last time I had a bottle just how fresh the wine was, still with high acid levels. Based on its current condition I can easily see another decade ahead for this wine.
Mark
TiggerK wrote:If it's from the local, they would be legally required to replace it or refund if the wine was not in good condition. Ah the joys of being in Aussie Retail...
Not the case with auction houses though of course.
So keep the receipt, and if it's bad take the (nearly full) bottle back quickly with the cork jammed back in. I've never had an issue, and if they have Vat 1 99 in stock, I'm assuming your local quite possibly has the same name as mine.
Cheers
Tim
timmspe wrote:rooman wrote:dlo wrote:
The wines were all sensational. On the back of its performance earlier in the week we drank a remarkably fresh and acid rich 1999 Tyrrell's Vat 1 Semillon (95 points),
David
I still have part of case of the '99. I was amazed last time I had a bottle just how fresh the wine was, still with high acid levels. Based on its current condition I can easily see another decade ahead for this wine.
Mark
I have seen a few of these on sale at the local, and I am keen to see what an aged and reputable Semillon has to offer. With the '99 under cork, I was surprised to see that the bottles were being stored upright. I hope I'm not being too paranoid, but would this (and potential other storage related problems) be enough to deter you from making the plunge? Thanks!
dlo wrote:timmspe wrote:rooman wrote:
I still have part of case of the '99. I was amazed last time I had a bottle just how fresh the wine was, still with high acid levels. Based on its current condition I can easily see another decade ahead for this wine.
Mark
I have seen a few of these on sale at the local, and I am keen to see what an aged and reputable Semillon has to offer. With the '99 under cork, I was surprised to see that the bottles were being stored upright. I hope I'm not being too paranoid, but would this (and potential other storage related problems) be enough to deter you from making the plunge? Thanks!
Look for bottles with high fill levels. And what he said, too ....
crusty2 wrote:dlo wrote:timmspe wrote:
I have seen a few of these on sale at the local, and I am keen to see what an aged and reputable Semillon has to offer. With the '99 under cork, I was surprised to see that the bottles were being stored upright. I hope I'm not being too paranoid, but would this (and potential other storage related problems) be enough to deter you from making the plunge? Thanks!
Look for bottles with high fill levels. And what he said, too ....
Remembering the old Lindemans 1968's and 70's White Burgs the levels were not a critical factor. These were labelled as 738ml with levels well down. The biggest determining factor in drinkability was the colour.
If purchasing I would suggest lining the bottles up and buy the one with the least colour development. This will not weed out any TCA but will cull the obviously oxidised bottles.
cheers
phill