Craig(NZ) wrote:Its hard at the end of the day to get away from the fact that personal tastes are a huge influence on any reviewer
I think personal taste is the most important part of a reviewer's individuality. It also allows a consumer to align their palate with that reviewer.
What I'd also like to know is how the reviewers taste. Do they taste blind or not? Are the tastings that result in the review based on a quick sniff, sip and spit or are the wines in the bottle allowed to evolve? Geoff Kelly, for example, may taste a wine over several days. If you see Geoff at a tasting, he will have his bag to collect wine samples to take home and review again the next day. But I guess with many of the top reviewers, they just don't have the time or opportunity to do this.
Personally I like to taste first to get an initial impression, later to see how it opens up with time or aeration and again with food (unless it is a beverage wine) and to taste over at least two days, if circumstances occur.
As for the varied reviews of
Dry River Pinot Noir 2006, on first tasting I thought the wine 'too big' and I can imagine how it would be disappointing and not score high points on the quick sniff, sip and spit method. But letting this wine evolve in the bottle, it revealed more than one could imagine. It reminded me of the 1994, which was still evolving when I tasted it in 2004.
Two tastings of
Coleraine 05 last year on subsequent days, from different bottles, from different glasses, you wouldn't even think were the same wine. One was magnificent, one was achingly disappointing, especially when Te Mata principals had stated they were "confident it was the best wine they had ever made". Maybe Bob Campbell's 88 was based on one of those disappointing bottles. Sure sounds like it.
BTW, both these wines are cork closed.