C&P Breton 1997 Bourgueil Grandmont (Loire) – Corked. (2/11)
corked
One more
Occhipinti 2008 “SP68” (Sicily) – Corked. (2/11)
Tori aimless
Produttori del Barbaresco 2008 Langhe Nebbiolo (Piedmont) – Corked. (2/11)
Stanley
Thévenet 2001 Morgon “Vieilles Vignes” (Beaujolais) – Corked. (12/10)
Thévenet 2001 Morgon “Vieilles Vignes” (Beaujolais) – Very light and soft, a slow-flowing river of memories. Minerals and earth are to the fore, with wood ear mushrooms lingering. Gentle and entirely lovely. (1/11)
Andrew Jackson
Texier 1999 Hermitage (Rhône) – Cellared since release. Packed up in a hand-constructed individual stryo sleeve. Stuffed into a bag and checked, paying the airline’s asinine baggage fee to do so despite not otherwise needing to check a bag. Collected at baggage claim after much foot-tapping delay. Unwrapped and rested, upright, in the hotel room to let the sediment settle. Transported, with care to avoid further sedimentary disturbance, to a restaurant. And – wine people can see the inevitable conclusion coming a mile away – corked. (11/10)
Boillot boy
L. Boillot 2006 Bourgogne (Burgundy) – Corked. (12/10)
Texiboo
Texier 2007 Côtes-du-Rhône (Rhône) – Corked. (9/10)
Melissa
Philippe Gilbert 2007 Menetou-Salon Rouge (Loire) – Corked. (9/10)
A regular blowing of cork
Ridge 1999 Geyserville (Sonoma County) – 14.8%. Corked. (8/10)
Ridge 1999 Geyserville (Sonoma County) – 14.8%. Unlike the last few bottles, which have been more or less on the early side of ready, this is years from that state. Coconut, blackberry juice, dust, primary tannin. Tastes like a 2004 (well, except for the fact that the 2004 can be an overwooded yak-fest) more than a 1999. This bottle should have been left to sleep for another five or ten years. (10/10)
Court, no spark
Tessier 2004 Cour Cheverny (Loire) – Corked. (8/10)