TN: Larose-Trintaudon, Rogue Valley PN

Monday Betsy made a steak over horseradish-dressed salad for one of the last al fresco meals of the year. I opened the 2000 Ch. Larose-Trintaudon (Haut-Medoc). This is one of the largest vineyards in Bordeaux, and I've never known it to make exciting wine. But Zachys has the 2000 for $8.99, and at that price I decided to try a couple. Rather low-acid, medium black plum fruit with a little cassis. A little herb/tobacco note. There's some tannic structure here (more than in most L-Ts) and it stands up to the steak ok. Finish is short for a B2K, and at it's normal $15 or so I'd probably prefer numerous satellite Bdx, but for an $9 cab blend this isn't bad. B

Tuesday I told Betsy I'd do dinner, and did my standard semi-teriyaki salmon on the grill. I actually did two sides, and followed recipes for both- panko-crusted asparagus ( adapted from a book called "How We Cook", recipe by Arlene Jacobs) and broccoli with warm bacon dressing (from Gourmet restaurant issue). I opened a 375 of the 2002 Foris Pinot Noir (Rogue Valley). I think Betsy's dad has a cousin of something who works for Foris, so I sometimes pick up when I see a bottle. I think this wine (Rogue is more southern Oregon) reminds me more of a California PN than what I think of as Oregon. Seemingly a little sharp at first, settles down into warm cherry fruit with notes of black tea and cola. OK, but I think I prefer good Willamette PNs as a style. B-

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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I usually think most vintages of Larose-Trintaudon are a decent value among inexpensive Bordeaux, but especially at $9, that sounds like a great buy. I wish I could find it here in Tucson for that price.

Reply to
Ken Blake

"Ken Blake" wrote in news: snipped-for-privacy@corp.supernews.com:

A while ago Larose-Trintaudon was our "house wine". Our local Trader Joe's had it for $8. We changed wines after we bought a case that was cooked. TJ's took it back with no problem. Last Summer it was 110+ for a few days here in Nevada. It must have been mishandled during transport or left outside during unloading. We had LT a long time ago with some steaks. We bought the 89 and the 90 (this was a long time ago). We opened the 89 and it was OK, but disappointing. We didn't have much hope for the 90, but it was very good. We were surprised at how different 2 bottles from the same vinyard could be. Our current house wine is "Big House Red" by Bonny Doon. We like it as much or better. I forget how much it costs, but it is in the under $10 range at case prices.

Fred.

Reply to
Fred

Even for 4$ I don't like Larose Trintaudon. It has always had the worst nose and taste in my opinion. Smells like wet garbage to me.

Reply to
Lawrence Leichtman

I've had a few L-Ts that were pretty bretty, others from same vintage were ok. I think sometimes that brett blooms in bottles that got too warm somewhere along the route to consumer. I mean, it has to be there to start with, but how much it progresses varies. The poster child for that is the '90 Montrose, which can range from a little pleasant whiff of barnyard to a waste treatment plant. OK ,. not that bad, it's always quite drinkable if you're reasonably brett-tolerant, but bottles vary immensely.

Reply to
DaleW

I guess I'm not Brett tolerant. Seems to make me sick.

Reply to
Lawrence Leichtman

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