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$39, 4 stars, 5 stars, 92 points, cabernet sauvignon, Napa, napa cabernet
Another Napa Cabernet that I got to taste at the AMEX Centurion Lounge at SFO airport. This one was a dazzler, but give it time.
29 Tuesday Nov 2016
Posted in Wine reviews
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$39, 4 stars, 5 stars, 92 points, cabernet sauvignon, Napa, napa cabernet
Another Napa Cabernet that I got to taste at the AMEX Centurion Lounge at SFO airport. This one was a dazzler, but give it time.
29 Tuesday Nov 2016
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$34, 4 stars, 90 points, cabernet sauvignon, Napa, napa cabernet
I have not visited the American Express Centurion Lounge at San Francisco airport in two months but the bartenders remembered me and offered up some special tastings. This was one of them, and boy was it good.
Expressive nose of dark fruits and cola. Plums and black tea fight with the tannins for control of the initial attack. The mid palate shows off more dark fruits that tail off with some herbs and oak on the mid length finish. This wine needs another 2 years in cellar to really shine. Drink 2018-2025 with pretty much any grilled meat dish. 90 points from me and 4 stars for this yummy $34 bottle. Salut….
26 Saturday Nov 2016
Posted in Wine reviews
When I visited the Wine Library in New Jersey last week they had this wine on sale and I sampled it. Delicious and fresh with unique flavors that reminded me somewhat of Conundrum White. It was my first experience with the Fiano grape varietal. I bought a bottle of this 94 point (Decanter rated) wine for only $16, making it a supremely good deal. Unfortunately I must have had a bottle with variation as it was not reminiscent of my first taste.
Light straw color in the glass. Nose of lemon zest and sea salt/iodine. The initial attack is lemon, green apple skin and an interesting acid component that is hitting the gums. This acidity moves swiftly to the mid palate where is sticks. The finish is of a decent length that consists of yet more lemon, acidity and a hint of cardamom. This wine strikes me as a bit one-dimensional but it is refreshing and would pair nicely with raw oysters. 89 points. I think it warrants a re-taste as my initial notes (mental) were totally different and I really enjoyed the wine much more then. Even at 89 points it is a decent QPR and I would give it 3 stars. Salut….
26 Saturday Nov 2016
Posted in Wine reviews
I can’t remember the exact details of when or where I bought this 3 Liter Double Magnum but it has been many years. This is a really nice Bordeaux wine which hailed from the amazing 2000 vintage. I have saved it for the right moment and hoped it had matured nicely and was not over the hill or premature. My first concern was the crumbling cork. I ended up with it inside the bottle and my shirt getting the first tastes before my Thanksgiving guests arrived. I was pleasantly surprised and thankful for my patience.
Still beautifully purple with no signs of bricking. The nose is sublime. Leather, plums, tobacco. The initial taste is very smooth, refined and balanced. More creamy purple fruits and leather show up as the wine works its way along. The tannins show up on the mid palate in a very subdued way. The finish has vanilla, plum torte and cassis berries. The tannins really kick in after a while and are gripping on the finish. 91 points and drinking nicely till 2023 at the least. I found it online for $30 but it got terrible ratings from the pros. I disagree but maybe that is because mine was in a large format bottle. I love aged Bordeaux and this one hit it on all cylinders for me. 5 stars if you are looking for a good deal on something that offers freshness with old world charm and some secondary flavors of maturity starting to emerge. Salut….
26 Saturday Nov 2016
Posted in Wine reviews
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$40, 4 stars, 92 points, Napa, napa petite Sirah, petite sirah
Blackish purple in the glass. Nose of cedar, black plums and tea. On the palate this wine immediately lets you know it is well built with hefty tannins. The flavors of plum, black cherry and pepper are fighting for control with the amazing tannins. I am loving this wine’s mouthfeel today in particular because it will pair beautifully with the ribeyes on the grill. If the dryness is overpowering for you I suggest a trip through a vinturi or decanting. The wine has a nice finish and the tannins go on forever. I really love this varietal and this is one excellent example. 92 points and 4 stars for this $40 offering. Salut….
16 Wednesday Nov 2016
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$13, 4 stars, 89 points, aussie shiraz, Barossa, Barossa Shiraz, shiraz
I have tasted the 2010 Mothers Milk before and really enjoyed it, so much so that I have been on the lookout ever since. Moxie and I were in New Jersey this past weekend and I took the opportunity to visit The Wine Library, a wine store I have shopped from online and have been following for some time. They used to have a great podcast on wine tastings and they started http://cinderellawine.com.
I was super excited to revisit this wine. On the nose- cherry and blackberry with red licorice. On the initial attack there is raspberry coulis and black cherry juice flavors. Really slight tannins open up after a while on the mid palate through to the finish, where I’m getting sour cherry from the acid. Easy to drink and delightful, this wine is not complex but offers a balanced mouthfeel and hides the 14.5% alcohol beautifully. This is an easy wine to quaff but would pair nicely with pizza, grilled lamb chops or a hearty winter stew. 89 points and 4 stars for this $13 effort. Salut…
16 Wednesday Nov 2016
Posted in Wine reviews
I tasted the 2006 Peters Family Cabernet exactly three years ago and am impressed that it has evolved more and gotten a higher score from me.
A nose of black currant preserves, pine needles and tar. On the palate a beautiful intro of plum, black berries and dried mint. The mid palate shows off some great tannins that are persistent yet subdued. The acidity is somewhat muted, overshadowed by the fruit and tannins. The finish is short to medium in length but ends with the tannic dryness. This wine has a great mouthfeel that I really like and the fruit is still vibrant. A mostly Cabernet Sauvignon wine that has 23% Merlot mixed in. Secondary flavors are evident and I’m excited about this wine’s development. Drink till 2022 with pasta, steaks and roasted game. 92 points and 4 stars for this $55 effort. Salut….
09 Wednesday Nov 2016
Posted in Wine reviews
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$42, 3 stars, 90 points, cabernet sauvignon, Napa, napa cabernet
A college friend moved to our area last year and we have been trying to meet up more than just once every six months, so when he suggested bringing over some vino and charcuterie on a beautiful Saturday afternoon…. I lit the outdoor fire and cleared the patio.
First up was this gem from Napa. Relatively young, I figured it could use decanting. We drank it with various cold meets and cheeses and talked of the old days. It was a fun afternoon and the wine certainly made it a memorable experience. I did not take notes but am relying on my memory.
Color was textbook and the nose had plum, dark fruits and a hint of oak. On the palate, super smooth. If nothing else, this wine glides like buttah. A rounded mouthfeel full of more dark plum and black berries. The tannins were very integrated and not drying. Either the decanting really did the trick or the wine is very stealthy with hiding them. A balanced acidity make this wine very easy to drink now, but I think it will cellar well for a few years (Say till 2022). Our pairing was excellent with the cold cuts but think this wine will be great with a fall dish like Osso Bucco, Coq au Vin or even Venison stew. I’m liking it a bunch and will go 90 points on this $42 offering. 3 stars and worthy of splashing out with good friends. Salut…
09 Wednesday Nov 2016
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Much has been written about decanting a wine. The often misguided advice of aged wines needing decanting are incorrect. In fact, I find that decanting old wines reduces whatever freshness they may still have and reduces their intensity. Having said that, there may be a need to decant an older bottle if there is a great deal of sediment. I only do this if there is a chance that the wine will be ruined by deposits in the bottom of the bottle or if I smell the wine and it has a bad aroma. Often times it is a release of gases that would otherwise spoil the drinking experience.
When decanting an old wine for the purposes of sediment avoidance, I use a candle under and behind the neck of the bottle so that I can see the sediment start to pour into the decanter, that is when I stop pouring.
When it comes to young wines, this is where I often deploy either my Vinturi, or my double decanter. What are these gadgets you ask… The Vinturi is a device that uses Bernoulli’s principle, much like a carburetor to mix a great deal of air to the wine as it is poured through the device. If you look closely at the side of it you will see two holes on opposing sides that allow the air to enter the unit and mix with the wine, giving it a large dose of aerating and helping to soften the wine and tame the tannins.
To double decant means you first decant the wine into a vessel, then return it to the bottle, both procedures adding air to the wine. My unit was designed to greatly aerate by virtue of the way the wine flows into it whereby a large amount of surface area is made available for the wine to come into contact with air. Once it is decanted, simply turn the unit upside down for it to decant back into the bottle.
I double decanted the rather tannic Bulgariana wine that I previously wrote about and to my amazement the wine took on a whole new persona. I was faced with a subdued nose as I was cooking onions in the kitchen that overpowered anything I could coax from the glass but the palate was alive and kicking. Beautiful black currant hints with much subdued tannins were the tertiary flavors after I got a tremendous coffee profile on my initial taste. On the mid palate, Nutmeg. This wine ceases to amaze me and is a whole different beast when really well aerated. I recommended it to a friend who normally drinks Pinot, he did not like the dryness and full bodied nature of this beast, each to his own I guess. If you are into this style, you can’t go wrong for under $10.
My advice is to experiment with decanting, try out a Vinturi and have some fun. (I have even heard of people using a blender to aerate their harsh and tannic reds!). DO you decant and if so, old or new wines or both? Salut….
09 Wednesday Nov 2016
Posted in Wine reviews
I’m in Japan and wanted to enjoy something red in my hotel room. I found this bottle at what looked like an Import Gourmet shop. I paid 1280 Japanese Yen for it, but it can be found for $8 USD. The notes: See-through pale purple that gives away the extraction of this wine. On the nose- subdued hints of dark cherry fruit and a touch of leather. Very hard to discern from a straight glass (no wine glasses in the hotel room!). On the palate I’m getting some black fruit and telltale Sangiovese notes. The wine has a refreshing acidity and a slight dryness from the well camouflaged tannins. The finish is short but decent, leaving behind some tannic components that grip the gums. This wine is relatively light in extraction, easy to quaff and a decent sundowner. 84 points make this a 2 star wine. Would I buy it again? Negative. Salut….