Monday, 21 December 2015

Ludovic Gaujal Vendanges Extremes

I was convinced to buy this when tasting it at the producera cave in Pinet.

We had searched it out as I'd read favourable reviews and saw that it sold good Picpoul de Pinet. As it was situated in Pinet itself and that turned out to be a 10 minute drive away it seemed remiss not to investigate.

The start was the oak aged Picpoul '1776' a completely new experience and more in that later.

However,  for outright oddness the Vendanges Extremes took the biscuit.

Laguage barrier prevented me from getting a decent understanding of what the production involved but I think it's Picpoul that's been aged in wood, possibly for a long time. Could it perhaps be fortified? The '14% +4%' suggested that may be a possibility?

Nose - very heady. Ripe dried apricot/orange peel. Seems like it's going to taste very alcoholic.

Taste - ripe, honeyed attack yet dry on the finish. Doesn't taste like a high alcohol wine. Shades of dry Spanish sherry?

We were informed that it would be a great accompaniment to froie gras. It's was, but I'd say it's best as an apperetif.

Thursday, 12 November 2015

Tuesday, 28 July 2015

Domaine du Tariquet Premiers Grives Cote de Gascogne

Can't decipher the label but it appears to be put gros mensang.

Explosive apricot. Massively intense. RH declared it 'interesting but too sweet', but is sweet accurate here? I'm not sure it is, given the acidity on the finish. Shades of a point gris but unique really.

Great aperitif or with something really fatty like pork belly.

Domaine du Tariquet always takes me back to the valhalla of bring upgraded on a Manchester-JFK flight en route to IMRF in 2009. The Tariquet flowed like water!

Sunday, 11 January 2015

Christmas and New Year wines

A brief note on a very mixed bag of wines consumed over the festive period.

Christmas eve saw two very different reds with very different satisfaction levels:


The Meerlust is a total steal at £10 (WS) - approximately half the price of their flagship version but very robust and interesting nonetheless: loads of leather, tobacco and deep dry fruit. The Montus is an ongoing disappointment (see previous posts on this). I keep hoping the years will add something interesting but I can't see anything emerging that can justify it's prestige. I note that it now at least £23 p/b. I paid about £12 for it en primeur around 6 years ago.

Christmas day and so on to two very smooth clarets:



The years had been kind to them. No trace of any raggedness. Ridiculously easy to drink but the downside was a lack of fruit. It is a natural consequence of wines this age? I suspect the fruit is the hardest thing to preserve as the tannins soften.

When followed later that evening by this morvedre-dominated number we brought back from St Chinian (see previous post on Chateau Bousquette) the contrast was fascinating. The Bousquette had loads of fruit but it seemed somehow vulgar/obvious next the the refinement of the clarets. Not sure what that tells me about my preferences....




The clear pick of the bunch was this splendid Alsatian Gewürztraminer:


Superbly oily, aromatic and hugely satisfying (£13 Majestic). If there's a more consistently enjoyable region for whites I know not of it. RH dismissed it as too sweet. I tried to make the case for it being ripe and somewhat lychee-like but not sweet per se. I got nowhere.

New year saw D&B help us cane all but the last two bottles we brought back from Faugeres:



...which had plenty of the minerally fruit I remember but didn't seem the have that smooth, almost creamy finish that I remember from the 2013 foliday.

This beast was almost comically powerful. A total sledgehammer of a wine with a corresponding 15.5% (!!!) ABV. Strange things are happening in Almansa - definitely place to watch. The value is bonkers. Their standard issue 'Leya' is a magnificent combination of smoky black olives and stone-like dryness (£4.90 - Vinisimus). This 'La Atalaya' (one up from Leya but at £8.79 is some distance of their flagship £17 'Alaya') has all of that but perhaps after a long course of streroids! A blend of Alicante Bouschet and Mourvèdre. The former? Not one I've ever come across before. It seems it's also refereed to as Garnacha Tintorera in Spain but is also claimed to be widely planted in France, according to Jancis Robinson: 'At the turn of the 21st century, Alicante Bouschet was the 12th most planted red wine grape in France with sizable plantings in the Languedoc, Provence and Cognac regions'


This fleurie was light, sappy, supple and refreshing. Yet I can't justify paying £17 (WS) for it.