WTN: Crozes, CdL, and Graves

Betsy made a dish of green beans and tomatoes Thursday, but main course was a shepherd's pie she had picked up at bakery (busy day). I opened the 2006 L'Esprit de Chevalier (Pessac-Leognan). Black plums, a little herb, moderate acidity, some fairly firm tannins, just a touch of vanillin oak. OK finish. Not a bad glass of red wine, but doesn't particularly say Bordeaux to me (much less Graves). Still, at $5 am I complaining? Nah. B-/B

There was enough shepherd's pie that I had leftovers Friday, as Betsy was playing in city. This time the wine was the 1999 Paul Jaboulet "Les Jalets" Crozes-Hermitage. To me in their larger bottlings (at least in 90s) PJA is probably the absolute king of bottle/batch variation. The '95 Parallele 45 CdR ranged from the greatest $5 bottle I remember to almost undrinkable. The range of the '99 Jalets has also been wide, though never the heights of the 95 P45. So it was with a little trepidation I opened my last bottle of this. This actually showed some variation within the same bottle. :) At first the acidity bordered on the screechy. But with a bit of airtime the fruit seemed to expand , and countered the acidity. Redder fruit than typical Rhone Syrah, but clean and bright with a little earth and very light funky/gamy odors. I quite enjoy, but after about a while it started cracking up, and seeming disjointed. Acidity reasserted itself, and the fruit started taking on pruney notes. Rest to the vinegar crock. This probably should have drunk up two or three years ago, but this bottle was fairly enjoyable for about an hour. At it's best, B/B+, but C+ is probably ultimately more realistic, even on my totally subjective scale.

I felt like one more glass, and opened the 2005 Baumard "Carte d'Or" Coteaux du Layon. CdL is generally sweet, but in my limited experience less so than QdC, somewhere in the netherland between demi- sec and full-blown dessert. This came across as pretty solidly sweet however, baked apple pie with spices, for my tastes it could use a bit more acidity. I found a glass more than I wanted, we'll see what Betsy thinks tonight. This really should be more of a dessert wine - I was careless opening this.

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've been a fan of Chenin Blanc for a long tome, but my experience has been limited to the California version. A great quaffer IMHO.... Always looking to expand my wine horizons, I tried a Savennieres which was touted by my wine pusher, but found no fruit in it - like sipping cold rock soup. Does it need to be decanted and let out for a week when young? Do I need to look for a different producer? (I'm not sure who did this one - it was a while ago)

I've also tried a South African one which I was not enamoured with. Does anyone have generally available (Oregon, Western US) examples of Loire and SA Chenins I should try?

Thanks,

JB

Reply to
Ronin

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