TN I like a Rheingau more than a Rhone white (surprise, surprise)

Last night we had an early dinner before Betsy headed to work. She made "salmon provencal" (salmon with olive, tomatoes, etc in an herb- garlic vinaigrette) with brown rice, salad, etc. Certainly not traditional (I don't think there are salmon in the Mediterranean?), but there are lots of recipes on web, some which include wine suggestions (whte CdP). I said what the hell, decided to follow that path, but on a budget. A Roussanne based white, the 2005 Eric Texier Cotes du Rhone-Brezeme Blanc was brought up. I had liked this at a store tasting. Here not so much. Apricot and yellow plum fruit, lower acidity, heavy and a little oily in the mouth. I tend to like Texier's wines, but on the other hand I seldom like Rhone whites. This is a C+/ B- for me, but if you like Roussanne in general I'm not the person to look to for notes. I think at store being tasted straight from an ice bucket made it seem crisper.

Decided to open another wine while I read an Ian Rankin novel. A little reductive at first, but the funk blows off quickly leaving a lovely wine. The 2005 Leitz Rudesheimer Magdalenenkreuz Spatlese is maybe my favorite '05 Germans to date. Sure, its got a bit of 2005 heft, but the sweetness is not out of Spatlesen territory, and the acidity keeps the whole package jumping. Peach/nectarine fruit with a generous squirt of lime on top, plenty of minerals, a little floral note. With time the fruit gets a candied orange edge. Rather creamy texture, but not in the least heavy. First 2005 that reminds me of a great 2001. Will revisit tonight. A-

Grade disclaimer: I'm a very easy grader, basically A is an excellent wine, B a good wine, C mediocre. Anything below C means I wouldn't drink at a party where it was only choice. Furthermore, I offer no promises of objectivity, accuracy, and certainly not of consistency

Reply to
DaleW
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A Texier wine that's low in acidity? Say it ain't so, Dale! Even his '03 Brezeme rouge wasn't.

Have you had any of the Zilliken or Hexamer '05s? David Schildknecht at least seems to think that they hit homeruns in '05.

Mark Lipton

Reply to
Mark Lipton

Seemed a bit flat to me. I'll take another look tonight. But agree not his norm (some of the Brezeme rouges from 6 or 7 vintages ago were so aggressively acidic I couldn't drink, and I think of myself as very acid-tolerant.)

I quite liked the Zilliken Saarburger Rausch Kabinett , though not as much as the '04. But the '05 Kabinett seemed more like a Spatlese. But a damn tasty Spatlese. Haven't had any '05 Hexamer IIRC.

Reply to
DaleW

But enough about Inspector Rebus, tell us about the wine!

(more seriously, thanks for the notes.)

Reply to
Doug Anderson

OT: I've always liked the Rebus books, but Dave leaves for St Andrews this week, so I find myself puzzling more over details- is Im Bru a soft drink or a stomach calmer, and how the hell DO you pronouce Siobhan? Etc etc etc.

Back on topic: No wine with dinner last night (out for Chinese, good water spinach and scallops in black pepper, fantastic pork with pickled cabbage soup). But back at home I retried both wines. The Texier looked dark and I thought it oxidized at first sip, but actually liked better than previous night. Very cold straight from fridge might have helped. The Leitz I liked if anything even better than previous night. We'll see how it is on day 3.

Reply to
DaleW

The second question I can hazard an answer to, more or less. To my american ear, it sounds like Sh@van where the "@" represents a schwa and the word rhymes with divan.

Yum.

Reply to
Doug Anderson

I only have heard the Irish pronunciation of the name, but I've heard it pronounced "Show-BAHN." And Im Bru is used as a mixer for whisky as well as being a hideously sweet soft drink.

Mark Lipton

Reply to
Mark Lipton

"Mark Lipton" wrote ........

Not that I am Irish, but it is a "not-uncommon" name here in NZ, and usually pronounced Shi-born (as in ship).

AB

Reply to
st.helier

"DaleW" skrev i meddelandet news: snipped-for-privacy@50g2000hsm.googlegroups.com...

At all cost, avoid any unidentified salmon in Southern France. They are likely to be imported, Norwegian, farmed, environtmentally, distatrous excuses for the noble wild fish ... and taste like mud.

On the whole, for salmon, I always get back to Riesling, or rarely PN.

Cheers

Nils

Reply to
Nils Gustaf Lindgren

I just had a nice steelhead (sea run rainbow trout ) for lunch. Red meat like a salmon, but a little lighter flavor and never as fatty as the Copper River Kings. We had a nice Elk Cove Pinot Blanc that went nicely - the body of chardonnay, but none of the heavy oak that I find gets in the way of food sometimes. (and my spouse doesn't like the Chardonnay grape.)

JB

Reply to
Ronin

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