Thursday, 27 February 2020

Past Masters (Aging High-end Austrian Grüner Veltliner)

Danube 1

Good old Austria… a land with white wines as steely, reserved, and imposingly austere as the (often slightly oversized) architectural wonders that grace its cities and towns.

Let’s wrap up the coverage of my Austrian media jaunt (yes, from back in May 2019… screw you, punky, I’ve been busy!) with a look back in time at how those steely, reserved, and imposingly austere wines get a little bit less steely, reserved, and imposingly austere given some time of repose in the botltle.

Austria lion

Austrian white wine spirit animal

C’mon, don’t you want to know what happens to high-end examples of Austria’s signature Grüner Veltliner over time? Don’t you want to know if they’re worth the time, expense, and patience? Don’t you want to read several extremely similar tasting notes about a single grape variety?

Of course you do, you wine nerd!…

Jamek Grüner Veltliner

That time when you drank Wachau Grüner while passing by the vineyard on a boat…

We’ll start with the recent past, then move to the not-so-recent past, all from examples imbibed during my (sort-of-kinda-recent) time in Austria:

kick ass2017 Weingut Hutter Silberbichlerhof Grüner Veltliner Smaragd (Wachau, $38)

This one, I suspect, hasn’t hardly budged an inch and needs more time to settle in on itself. Grapefruit, citrus, minerals, ripe stone fruits, even hints of tropical fruits, all behind a surprisingly powerful and not-so-surprisingly acidic facade.  Here’s to the bigger (14.5% abv) and still beautiful Grüners… just don’t toast with it for another few years.

 

elegant2017 Weingut Bernhard Ott Engabrunner Stein Grüner Veltliner “1ÖTW” Erste Lage (Kamptal, $64)

This white’s palate is focused like a laser beam… and it’s winemaking style is focused on elegance, length, and spiciness. My tasting notes likened it to “a shaft of lemon light;” give it one or two more years in bottle, and that light will start to look gloriously Jacob’s Ladder-like to your palate, I suspect.

Austria casks

elegant2016 Weingut Leo Alzinger Loibner Loibenberg Grüner Veltliner Smaragd (Wachau, $60)

This is my style of Grüner, and one of my favorite vineyard sources in all of Austria. Citrus peel, lemons, grapefruit, white flowers, ginger, chalk notes… damn, people, what more could you want out of this variety? This is balanced stuff in the mouth, citric and transparent in its energetic fruitiness. Lovely to the core, and just starting to show its stuff after 3+ years.

 

2015 Weingut Birgit Eichinger Strasser Gaisberg Grüner Veltliner Reserve ÖTW Erste Lage (Kamptal, $17)

Tasted from magnums, because we’re badass, this one is starting to display the mature side of the grape. With honey, blossoms, apricots, lemon peel, along with earthiness and spice, the nose is perfumed and heady. There’s vibrant, lemony brilliance on the palate with just a hint of the toast that will develop later.

Jurtschitsch Käferberg Reserve Grüner Veltliner

elegant2015 Weingut Jurtschitsch Käferberg Reserve Grüner Veltliner Erste Lage ÖTW (Kamptal, $54)

Lemons, pith, white peaches, flint, and… precision. That about sums up this exceptional Grüner from Jurtschitsch. Full of minerality and freshness, and impeccably balanced, it’s hard to find any cracks in the armor here. I don’t mean that just in terms of critique; it comes off as a few years younger than its vintage, which is a great example of how properly-crafted renditions of this grape variety can be built for long-haul runs in the bottle.

 

kick ass2015 Weingut Josef Jamek Ried Achleiten Grüner Veltliner Smaragd (Wachau, $55)

Jamek is jammin’. Pears and pepper, people, pears and pepper. And that palate core… daaaaaaaaammmmmmmmmmmmmnnnnnn, gurl! This one is still somewhat tightly-wound around its palate’s center, teasing savory and saline notes. It’ll be going gangbusters in a couple of more years as its textural complexity starts to unwind and show off a bit.

 

elegant2014 Weingut Johann Topf Gaisberg Grüner Veltliner Erste Lage ÖTW (Kamptal, $NA)

When wine geeks tell you that Grüner Veltliner has one of the most interesting bouquets of any white wine variety, this is exactly the kind of wine that they have in mind. Flint, yellow apple, pepper, spices, and a bit of green herbs and veggies are all in the aromatic mix. In the mouth, you get juicy, ripe lemon, and a sort of smoky minerality that lasts a good long while, ending in the more mature stuff (like hints of toast and mesquite honey).

Vienna 2

elegant2008 Weingut Emmerich Knoll Ried Loibenberg Grüner Veltliner Smaragd (Wachau, $70)

Grilled citrus with spices, marmalade, and toasted coconut? Awwww yeah, this vineyard just never seems to disappoint. While the nose here is definitely showing tertiary action, the palate is still pithy and electric, and juicy – the citrus fruit is still deep, suggesting that there’s a good deal of life left in this wine even after more than a decade of aging.

 

kick ass2007 Sigl Grüner Veltliner Ried Steiger Smaragd (Wachau, $NA)

Just killer. Killer. Spices, dried/baked citrus fruits, nuts, toast… you could spend hours sniffing this. The palate is all citrus fruit, simultaneously deep and transparent, like a clear spot of pristine ocean waters. Fresh, long, and fantastic, it makes a compelling case for developing the virtue of patience.

Cheers!

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Copyright © 2020. Originally at Past Masters (Aging High-end Austrian Grüner Veltliner) from 1WineDude.com - for personal, non-commercial use only. Cheers!

source http://www.1winedude.com/past-masters-aging-high-end-austrian-gruner-veltliner/

Monday, 24 February 2020

February Wine Newsletter

The post February Wine Newsletter appeared first on Wine School of Philadelphia.



source https://www.vinology.com/february-wine-newsletter/

Wine Reviews: Weekly Mini Round-Up For February 24, 2020

I taste a bunch-o-wine (technical term for more than most people). So each week, I share some of my wine reviews (mostly from samples) and tasting notes in a “mini-review” format.
 
They are meant to be quirky, fun, and (mostly) easily-digestible reviews of (mostly) currently available wines (click here for the skinny on how to read them), and are presented links to help you find them, so that you can try them out for yourself. Cheers!

Grab The 1WineDude.com Tasting Guide and start getting more out of every glass of wine today!

Shop Wine Products at Amazon.com

Copyright © 2020. Originally at Wine Reviews: Weekly Mini Round-Up For February 24, 2020 from 1WineDude.com - for personal, non-commercial use only. Cheers!

source http://www.1winedude.com/wine-reviews-weekly-mini-round-up-for-february-24-2020/

Thursday, 20 February 2020

Once More, with Precision (Château Lilian Ladouys Gets Serious)

Château Lilian Ladouys vintages

“I think… we’re now more precise.”

According to manager Vincent Bache-Gabrielsen, that’s the secret behind the revitalization of Saint-Estèphe’s Château Lilian Ladouys.

If Bache-Gabrielsen’s name feels familiar, it’s because he also manages Château Pédesclaux, the Pauillac property that the Lorenzetti family purchased just one year after picking up Lilian Ladouys, and which their team also revitalized. If you’re sensing a theme here, don’t congratulate yourself, because, bluntly stated, the theme is pretty friggin’ obvious. And – spoiler alert! – the results are basically the same: an ailing Bordeaux producer weaned off of life support, and now celebrated as doing the rarest of all Bordeaux wine tricks: over-delivering for its price point (you can find their main red for well under $40/bottle).

Backtracking for a bit of history: the Château Lilian Ladouys property dats back to the 1560s, and was revitalized once before in the late 1980s. Like skinny ties and jams shorts, that `80s endeavor was ill-fated, as Ladouys found few buyers for its at-the-time much-elevated prices. Periods of what Bache-Gabrielsen called “irregular quality” followed, until the Lorenzettis saw potential in Ladouys’ Saint-Estèphe terroir and decided to buy it, with the understanding that to turn things around “we have to work!”

While 2009 saw immediate improvements that Bache-Gabrielsen termed “interesting,” it wasn’t until the soils began to really improve in 2010 that the team felt that Ladouys was turning the corner. They’ve since been engaged in the selling an acquisition of various plots in the region, replanting to maximize proper rootstock usage, and favoring gravelly soils over limestone in an effort to significantly up the percentage of Cabernet Sauvignon in their blend. About 2/3 of their property has since been exchanged in some form or another, and as of 2018 they now have about 80 hectares of vineyards from which to draw, with half of it devoted to Cabernet Sauvignon (the rest being Merlot, Petit Verdot, and a tiny portion of Cabernet Franc), and 80% of it on gravelly soils.

“It’s really different from Pauillac,” Bache-Gabrielsen told me during a live video tasting, “the subsoil is the same, but you have more clay here, and the limestone is much deeper in Pauillac.” This suits their new house style, which is focused on taming extraction and emphasizing aging potential. “We tend to make epicurean wines,” he explained, ” approachable young but that cab age well. We try to balance the power of Saint-Estèphe with freshness….”

Lilian Ladouys 17

(image: Château Lilian Ladouys)

crowd pleaser2017 Chateau Lilian Ladouys La Devise de Lilian ($25)

Lilian Ladouys’ “second wine” is a 55/45 Cab/merlot split that serves as a calling-card introduction to their new style. Tart black cherry, currant, and cassis fruits abound, and,yes, it’s approachable, earthy, and fresh,but also noticeably powerful and well-structured. It sees only 20% new oak, in part to emphasize the fruit, but also I suspect to avoid adding any other tannin into the mix. There’s a balance of vibrancy and depth that serves as the Garamond Classico SC, watermarked, Patrick Bateman’s business card of what to expect in their main red. Speaking of which…

 

kick ass2016 Chateau Lilian Ladouys

With 62% Merlot, 32% Cab Sauv, and 6% PV, there’s aromatic complexity that stands out in this balanced, powerful, chewy, and fresh blend. Black olives, dark plums, cassis, violets, herbal spices, dried rose petals, and deeeeeeeep dark fruits. This vintage saw the utilization of 400L barrels, to “soften the aging” as Bache-Gabrielsen put it. “The idea is to find the right level of aromatic ripeness and freshness, to avoid rusticity.” Mission accomplished.

 

elegant2015 Chateau Lilian Ladouys

A nearly identical blend to the 2016, “the tannins were a bit hard,” Bache-Gabrielsen noted about the vintage, “but late rain allowed them to evolve in a good way.” Less concentrated than its younger siblings, and with spicier, redder fruits, there’s fine elegance here. The palate is plummy and finishes with a sense of structure, earthiness, and finesse. Bache-Gabrielsen summed it up for the both of us when he mused “I love the balance on the 2015…,” almost trailing off in a bit of a daydream.

 

kick ass2014 Chateau Lilian Ladouys

Here, we’ve got 56% Merlot, 40% CS, and 2% each of Cab Franc and PV from an “‘Indian Summer’ vintage” as Bache-Gabrielsen described it (lots of hot, sunny days, but also lots of cool nights). Dark spices, green herbal notes, mint, dark red fruits, powerful and juicy cassis and redcurrant flavors. there’s breadth, freshness, funk, and grip here. It’s smoothing out now, though still needs steak to tame the tannins if you’re drinking it any time soon.

 

overachiver

overachiver

2012 Chateau Lilian Ladouys

A sinewy, chewy, complex mix of 55% Cab and 45% Merlot, the vintage was less sunny than 2014 and later ripening, with the fruit coming in “at the limit” as Bache-Gabrielsen described it. Black cherry, licorice, cassis, graphite, dried spices, black olives, and green herbs all mingle on the nose, which is classic Bordeaux. The concentration, balance, power, freshness, and deliciousness are all ramped up in fantastic ways, and the structure is integrated and substantial enough that they wine still feels young. I’m a bit stunned that this kind of quality can be had for $35-ish (especially with the words Saint-Estèphe on the label).

 

sexy2010 Chateau Lilian Ladouys

The Wayback machine journey ends for our tasting here, at the third vintage for the current Lilian Ladouys team, and the first to be made after their “first big rearrangement of the plots.” 60% Cab, 40% Merlot, and 100% juicy, this feels like the most internationally-styled of the modern Lilian Ladouys releases. Spicy plums, currants, black cherry, black olives, minerals, tons of herbs, smoke, and some game meat all kick things off, backed up by a palate that’s still grippy, and fairly fresh. What it lacks in the finesse and precision of later vintages it makes up for in power, and delicious, juicy fruitiness.

Cheers!

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Copyright © 2020. Originally at Once More, with Precision (Château Lilian Ladouys Gets Serious) from 1WineDude.com - for personal, non-commercial use only. Cheers!

source http://www.1winedude.com/once-more-with-precision-chateau-lilian-ladouys-gets-serious/

Monday, 17 February 2020

Wine Reviews: Weekly Mini Round-Up For February 17, 2020

I taste a bunch-o-wine (technical term for more than most people). So each week, I share some of my wine reviews (mostly from samples) and tasting notes in a “mini-review” format.
 
They are meant to be quirky, fun, and (mostly) easily-digestible reviews of (mostly) currently available wines (click here for the skinny on how to read them), and are presented links to help you find them, so that you can try them out for yourself. Cheers!

Grab The 1WineDude.com Tasting Guide and start getting more out of every glass of wine today!

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Copyright © 2020. Originally at Wine Reviews: Weekly Mini Round-Up For February 17, 2020 from 1WineDude.com - for personal, non-commercial use only. Cheers!

source http://www.1winedude.com/wine-reviews-weekly-mini-round-up-for-february-17-2020/

Monday, 10 February 2020

Wine Reviews: Weekly Mini Round-Up For February 10, 2020

I taste a bunch-o-wine (technical term for more than most people). So each week, I share some of my wine reviews (mostly from samples) and tasting notes in a “mini-review” format.
 
They are meant to be quirky, fun, and (mostly) easily-digestible reviews of (mostly) currently available wines (click here for the skinny on how to read them), and are presented links to help you find them, so that you can try them out for yourself. Cheers!

Grab The 1WineDude.com Tasting Guide and start getting more out of every glass of wine today!

Shop Wine Products at Amazon.com

Copyright © 2020. Originally at Wine Reviews: Weekly Mini Round-Up For February 10, 2020 from 1WineDude.com - for personal, non-commercial use only. Cheers!

source http://www.1winedude.com/wine-reviews-weekly-mini-round-up-for-february-10-2020/

Monday, 3 February 2020

Wine Reviews: Weekly Mini Round-Up For February 3, 2020

I taste a bunch-o-wine (technical term for more than most people). So each week, I share some of my wine reviews (mostly from samples) and tasting notes in a “mini-review” format.
 
They are meant to be quirky, fun, and (mostly) easily-digestible reviews of (mostly) currently available wines (click here for the skinny on how to read them), and are presented links to help you find them, so that you can try them out for yourself. Cheers!

Grab The 1WineDude.com Tasting Guide and start getting more out of every glass of wine today!

Shop Wine Products at Amazon.com

Copyright © 2020. Originally at Wine Reviews: Weekly Mini Round-Up For February 3, 2020 from 1WineDude.com - for personal, non-commercial use only. Cheers!

source http://www.1winedude.com/wine-reviews-weekly-mini-round-up-for-february-3-2020/