Question
Posted: Tue Mar 21, 2006 1:32 pm
I recently opened a bottle of Wynns Cab Sauv 03 - disastrous decision.
While I'm not one to make respectable tasting notes, words like green, closed and tight sprung to mind. The wine hadn't "done anything" (very confident the wine wasn't corked).
The poor decision resulted from a combination of factors:
1). Poor disposable income levels
2). The want to impress the girl friends old man and
3). Lack of experience with drinking windows
The question I pose is: Are high scoring wines that are quoated by the "experts" (e.g. JO) as having very long maturing periods before they reach their peak, going to taste good on release?
Ignore the fact that the Wynns is possibly crap full stop. Lets say the question is in light of a 2002 Penfolds Bin 707 Cab Sauv.
If the answer to the question is: "No, a 2002 Penfolds 707 Cab Sauv isn't likely to taste remarkable on release," then I pose another question: Where is the validity in releasing scores like 96/100 for it in 2006? Can you just tell it's gonna be a ripper even though it's nothing crash now? Is this something that comes with experience?
I realise that scores are only indications and that there is a whole spectrum of tasting palates, I'm just trying to gauge if a wine can taste poorly ("aw yuk!") on release but at the same time indicate tremendous quality later on in life?
Cheers!
While I'm not one to make respectable tasting notes, words like green, closed and tight sprung to mind. The wine hadn't "done anything" (very confident the wine wasn't corked).
The poor decision resulted from a combination of factors:
1). Poor disposable income levels
2). The want to impress the girl friends old man and
3). Lack of experience with drinking windows
The question I pose is: Are high scoring wines that are quoated by the "experts" (e.g. JO) as having very long maturing periods before they reach their peak, going to taste good on release?
Ignore the fact that the Wynns is possibly crap full stop. Lets say the question is in light of a 2002 Penfolds Bin 707 Cab Sauv.
If the answer to the question is: "No, a 2002 Penfolds 707 Cab Sauv isn't likely to taste remarkable on release," then I pose another question: Where is the validity in releasing scores like 96/100 for it in 2006? Can you just tell it's gonna be a ripper even though it's nothing crash now? Is this something that comes with experience?
I realise that scores are only indications and that there is a whole spectrum of tasting palates, I'm just trying to gauge if a wine can taste poorly ("aw yuk!") on release but at the same time indicate tremendous quality later on in life?
Cheers!