Bought at the producer's place in Priorat. This was absolutely superb. Light initially (cranberry, Red current, fairly high acidity) then bags of depth on the finish (savoury, earthly, oddly petroly edge). Consumed by Geir and I whilst preparing dinner. What a great way remember a great day out in Spain.
Saturday, 22 December 2012
Petit Mas Sinen
Bought at the producer's place in Priorat. This was absolutely superb. Light initially (cranberry, Red current, fairly high acidity) then bags of depth on the finish (savoury, earthly, oddly petroly edge). Consumed by Geir and I whilst preparing dinner. What a great way remember a great day out in Spain.
Thursday, 20 December 2012
Sunday, 25 November 2012
Domaine Les Fines Graves
£8 (WS). Deceptive one. At fist it feels very balanced and clean but there turns out to be virtually no fruit at all save perhaps the faintest hint of black cherry, perhaps? The finish is nonexistent, neither harsh nor satisfying, just missing!
Sunday, 11 November 2012
Kaiken Ultra Malbec
Liam kindly brought two of these round when we had steaks last week. He thought they would be a good match and right he was. Dense, velvety texture. Dark purple, almost black colour. Highly savoury and well balanced. Doesn't feel anything like as heavy as it should do for a 15% wine. Very good value at £12. Would be good with duck at Christmas perhaps? I read that 'Kaiken is the Argentine brand of Vina Montes, which is based in Chile.' Liam visited the winery on his recent South American sojourn.
Wednesday, 17 October 2012
George Badriou Beaujolais 2010
£8 (Avery's) and good value at that. Everything you could ask for from generic 'bas Beaujolais'. Vibrant raspberry fruit and a hint of pepper coming later. Just goes to show that you don't necessarily need a cru region to get the best out of Gamay.
Tuesday, 25 September 2012
Cuvee details Richard Blanc 2011 PGI Comte Tolosan
Further evidence of the south west's value. At £5.50 (Majestic) this is a steal. Seems to manage to be apple like, buttery and very balanced. A blend of colombard, ugni blanc and sauvignon blanc. Shades of the Brumont white we used to enjoy. I read that IGP stands for Indication Geographique Protegee - the EU equivalent of Vin de Pays.
Friday, 21 September 2012
Chateau la decade Bottiere Julienas 2008
Moderate black cherry up front. Very fine peppery, subtly tannic finish. A cru Beaujolais that approaches but doesn't quite reach Thivin country. Thus far, this is the best of the birthday case. No idea what the price was (Avery's) but I'd gladly pay at least £10-15 for this.
Monday, 17 September 2012
Dad's 69th birthday wines
Both were 'birthday' wines consumed with Dad on his 69th during what it likely to be my last visit to Station House. The claret was one from his cellar. The Cab. Sav is one that Daniel and I bought him in 1995 ('love from The Burkes' I'm told the wrapping said. The latter had help up very well despite year of vertical storage in the bibby (with resultant dessicated cork). Still instantly recognisable as a new world ball buster but the years had mellow it considerably to take on a pleasing rustic edge. The claret was very poor given the region (St George St Emillion) and the year (2000). It had no recognisably Claret like strengths and while not unpleasant it was a disappointment. Sadly there are about 8 left which I doubt will prove good value.
The attritional loss of faith in Claret continued a week later with the consumption of the birthday wine I bought him: La Croix de Beaucaillou 2006 St-Julien. At £30 p/b this was criminally unremarkable. I have definitely enjoyed wines (with Geir) from this stable previously. Perhaps that was the producer's first wine but I doubt it as that now seems to come in at about £80 p/b. It is a long time indeed since I have had a pleasurable Claret experience which as also felt like reasonable value. One exception might the WS's Château Canada (£7.50) but they seem to be increasingly thin on the ground. Perhaps my tastes have changed rather than the wines? Possible, but unlikely, given that the bottles I've enjoyed recently from South Africa are those that remind me of Clarets past.
Friday, 13 July 2012
Bourgueil 2010
Excellent example if everything I like about Cabernet Franc. Dry, cedary edge with subtle sour cherry fruit. Cracking.
Wednesday, 8 February 2012
M&S Ardeche Gamay.
Fair play for getting a Gamay out there for £4.95 but this is atrocious stuff. I can taste absolutely no Gamay like features of any kind here. I can't even bring myself to finish the bottle. A far cry from Yapp Bros Ardeche offering which I think came in at £9. This is a false economy if ever there was one.
Chinon 2009
Insipid Cabernet Franc. Expected better from Waitrose. Lacking any distinguishing features. Little in the way of backbone. Relatively poor value for £10.
Saturday, 14 January 2012
Grand Enclos du Chateau de Cerons, Graves, 2006
Due to a balls up at the till in M&S this cost us precisely zero pence! Much darker colour that I'd expected, but then again, my experience of white Bordeaux is minimal. Not a million miles away from a maconaise offering, perhaps? Slightly more of a peach edge to the fruit (almost like languedoc whites?), could that be the semillion? It has 'a hint of oak' according to the label. Might this explain the richness? On the back of this (should have been £16 a bottle) I'd be tempted to go back to white Bordeaux and test the waters further.