TORB wrote:...I have drunk 10 gallons of water, taken a box of Panadol and had a few hours estra sleep, I am starting to feel human again but I think I need an alcohol free week
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TORB, from everything I've read and experienced, you'll do better with Aspirin than Paracetamol if your pains are hangover related,
especially if they're red wine related. Interjections are sure to abound, but try it next time and see, it's worth a shot anyhow
To the 'notes'!
It was a quiet week, and really pretty varied quality-wise
1986 Penfolds Bin 28 Kalimna Shiraz - $? - This has certainly confirmed itself as a great vintage of Bin 28. Two bottles on the one night, both showed identically. Starting to give in to red brown at the edge, but surprisingly deep and very pure colour. In the bottle, quite an astringent nose, green and woody with fruit very much at the back. Once decanted, initial notes slowly disappear to reveal more lively fruit aromas and cigar box (yep!). On the palate, a treat of plum, fig (yes indeed!), week-old candied cherries left over with a little Black Forest cake still hanging on, bitter sweet chocolate in a good way, and small red berries. Medium+ length with a great mouthfeel. This must be at its peak, though certainly not on the way out. Will it get better? Probably not, but I'd say it has a good five years left before curtains. Consider it softly murmured with some hesitation, but I think the 1999, of all subsequent vintages, will end up with a similar profile, albeit a little sooner - at least the wine makers and vintage analysts seem overly sure of this last point (I'm not entirely convinced!).
1997 (Wolf) Blass Adelaide Hills Basket Press(ed, phew!) Cabernet Merlot - $14 - I think this is an export-only label, and some would argue that's okay for us. A lot of acid, quite tannic, medium bodied, redeemed by confectionery cherry notes on the relatively short, somewhat stout, tannic palate. The palate says it's there to stay, the colour says three years and no more, and I'll duck for cover with the sweeper that this just might end up somewhere close to a bad imitation of mediocre Baralo. An okay wine with corner store takeout pizza, pies or fish'n'chips
2002 Taylors Shiraz - $14 - Great, great value if this is your style. Very deep crimson purple, moderate glass cling. What a sniff, especially at this price point! Plum, cherry, sweet black pepper, Clare liquor ice (sic!) minty eucalypt chocolate and a little vanillin oak in the background. The palate reflects the bouquet cleanly with very good length and intensity. This showed much better than the 2001 Mitchell Peppertree and, duely, the 2002 Mountadam, both consumed the same evening. No notes for them, as they may just have been in unfair company. Oh my, I can't wait to see the big sluggers from 2002 in the Clare - the mere thought of what the Aberfeldy might bring makes me giddy
1996 Haselgrove Reserve Shiraz 'H' - $24 - Yes, another one, just as good (and just the same) as the last. I still don't understand why this has such a lack of followers. Oh well, I'll happily go along with that and keep it for my(our)self(selves)...
1996 Leasingham Bin 61 Shiraz - $22 - Showed itself even better this time. Add marcipan and confectionery to the palate list. This bottle seemed to hint that there might, just possibly, be some improvement on the way - if not, there
must be 3-5 years left in it. Great! ...that's the way it goes down
Jakob