Burgundy Rocks

That was certainly the general consensus last Wednesday when we had the opportunity to taste a handful of some of our favorite Burgundy producers.

First opened was a 1969 Remoissenet Volnay Clos des Chenes which was subtly corked. This was a shame really as I’ve had this before where the wine showed flamboyant aromatics of deep red fruits kissed with spice and minerality.

Our next stop was a 1985 Remoissenet Bonnes Mares which was meaty, earthy with a darker fruit flavor profile. In the mouth, this was very well-structured; entry was impressive with supple tannins giving this wine a seductive texture on the palate. Sous bois, plums, and damp earth notes in the silken mid-palate. I think this was drinking at peak and although a well-balanced wine, I thought it was wanting on the finish where the sappy tannins seemed to dominate.

I was next handed a glass of 1999 Hudelot Noellat Romanee-St-Vivant which was a very youthful wine. Smoky, wild berries, floral, iron-like minerality dominated the aromas leading to a palate that was full-bodied, rich with firm tannins and more pronounced ripe red berries and candied cherries. Impressive concentration and length. This is such a fantastic bottle showing both power and elegance.

Bill S next shared a taste of 1996 Cos d’Estournel which displayed aromas of cedary spice, eucalyptus, dried tobacco, herbs and a core of blackcurrant, blackberries, and plums. This wine was definitely well-structured backed by ripe but firm tannins, medium acidity, and fruit concentration but I think it’s too young to drink now.  The high levels of tannins overwhelm right now but it has all the right parts suggesting a very positive future ahead of it. I’m thinking, if I had a bottle of this on hand, I will revisit in at least another 5 years.

Three for four… so far so good.

But when a glass of 1978 Remoissenet Volnay Clos des Chenes  made it to my side of the table filling the room with aromas of black cherry preserves, raspberry compote, dried rose petals, red currants, and spice and I felt my knees go weak. This wine was seduction in a glass; from the intense, beautiful aromatics to the silky palate with a boost of acid that kept the wine fresh and vibrant, I was mesmerized. After that initial sip, I just happily sniffed the wine and saved the last two ounces until I was about to leave. As I get in my car, I had the biggest smile on my face knowing that I had the best roadie in town.

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The Perfect Power Couple

By: Ryan Tedder

We were hiding out from the hundred plus degree heat the last weekend before most of the kids go back to school and had to drink some amazing wines! Half “celebrating the near end of summer” and half  “just because it’s Graileys” we decided to drinks some great wines. The selections were as diverse as they were delicious. Two of our favorite gracious clients book-ended a fantastic day of drinking!

1996 Joseph Drouhin Montrachet was one of the best bottles of white wine Burg I have tasted from 96!  The richness and depth was unbelievable as well as the baked apple and pear tart with hazelnut,  honey, yellow flowers and limestoney minerality. The wine was fat with flavor but focused and long on the palate. The verve between richness and acid played out beautifully and the finish lasted for over a minute.  It was truly special wine.

The 2006 Anthill Farms Pinot Noir was showing young and vibrantly. The wine was juicy with strawberry, bing cherry, pomegranite and citrus peel. Roses, spices and a nice underbrush finished out this lush wine that was simply hedonistic.

The 1999 Ceretto Bricco Rocche was similarly young and it took darn near 2 hour to open up in a decanter.  The dried fruit, cranberry and fig notes were a minor note as the dried leaves, pine needles, dried rose petals and tannins took center stage. The wine was massive and needs another 5-8 years or more decanter wine to show better-I think next time a full day should be allowed.

2006 Ornellaia was popped early-it drank like a spicy bottle of Pauillac from 2005. The oak and grippy Cabernet fruits of cassis, black licorice, green peppercorn and tobacco dominated the nose and palate. It fleshed out with some air and the coffee, espresso, mocha and chocolate from the french oak added a sweet / savory element to the wine. Quite a young beauty.

1994 Etude Cabernet Sauvignon from the masterful hands of Tony Soter was a real delight in the middle of these young wines. The 1994 was drinking at maturity and made you believe in the quality and ageability of old Napa Cabs-we all just hope the current round of Cabs ages anything close to the last 40 years.  These 1994 Napa Cabs drinking the fruitier versions of great left bank wines with 20 years of age on them. The secondary spice, pipe tobacco, meat, eucalyptus, cassis, graphite and raspberry liquor were fantastic in this wine-wow!

 2009 Spottswoode Cabernet was showing gorgeously as always-this is a top notch site in St. Helena that has been turning out great Cabs for over 20 years. The 2009 is meaty with saturated red and black fruit, creamy milk choclately oak and a powerfully smooth bottle of great wine.  Luxurious vino.

The 2008 Next of Kyn no. 2 Syrah from Sine Qua Non was the star of the show as far as reds go. The wine reminded me of a new world expression of La Landonne. Plump, lush, round and never ending on the palate-the Next of Kyn was possibly the best new world Syrah I have ever had-it was more to my liking than Burning the Midnight Oil from SQN-which was my previous favorites. Mr. Krankl and his people make the best Rhone varietal wines in the new world hands down.  If you think of every lush and delightful element that a wine could have-this wine has it.

  All and all-the 96 Drouhin Montrachet and 2008 Next of Kyn made the perfect power couple to start the weekend. Delish!

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A Hard Day’s Night

By 10am last Friday, the front room was already a whirlwind of activity as tables and lounge chairs were moved and stuck in the back to make room for a private party that evening. By 3:00pm, the front room has completely morphed into a performance stage for the Beatles tribute band, A Hard Day’s Night. We thought we knew this was going to be a fun, crazy night. Little did we know….

As de rigeur at Graileys on a Friday, a few members popped in to properly usher in the weekend. By the time the band was set up around 4pm, we’ve already enjoyed a yeasty and baked dough flavored, full-bodied and structured NV Krug Grande Cuvee; a supple, dense and cassis/coffee-tinged 1997 Merryvale ‘Profile’; a toasty, brioche and chalk-driven NV Philliponnat Brut Royal Reserve.

But as the party went into full mode, a few more standout wines that defined decadence were shared around.  By the time the band hit Hey Jude, we had already enjoyed a 1982 Chateau Ausone that boasted a rich array of black raspberries, blackberries, earth, floral, tea leaves and spicy cedar undertones. Remarkably concentrated and structured with velvety tannins and a load of lush fruit created this seamless texture that made for a compelling drinking experience. Persistent finish with touches of licorice and blackberries.

I was also handed a glass of a 1994 Colgin Herb Lamb which was, again, pure decadence and seduction. This is the second time I’ve tasted this wine in a span of six weeks and this continues to enthrall with its explosive aromatics of rich blueberry pie, crushed black raspberries, licorice,violets, and mocha. Such sumptuous character was consistent on the palate. There are no harsh edges to this wine; resolved tannins, thread of acidity keeps the wine’s density and richness in check and balanced. This was my WOTN.

A bottle of 2009 DRC Vosne Romanee 1er Cru Cuvee Duvault-Blochet was opened next. This was remarkably complex given its youth showing layered, high toned, and fresh aromas of red cherries, wild berries, plums, baking spices, and mineral undertones. The palate showed the structure of the vintage with some supple tannins and vibrant acidity. The fresh red fruits, underlying minerality and vibrant acidity really defined the wine’s long finish. The wine’s structure and balance suggest great potential for long term cellaring although this was delicious to drink now, too.

So, by the time the band hit the notes on All My Loving, everybody was in a happy place, regally poised to conquer the weekend.

 

 

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Simply WOW

By: AJ McClellan

The other day we had a great night opening a slew of stellar bottles but I must say the duo of 82 Doms were a wonderful highlight!

2009 Foley Howell Mountain Cabernet Sauvignon – Chocolaty and rich! A great wine that was showing in contrast to everything else on the table.

1993 Domaine Leflaive Puligny Montrachet 1er Folatieres – This bottle was a little oxidative but it was still showing some pretty fruit and great mineral notes.

1989 Leroy Vosne Romanee Beaux Monts – One of the stars of the show! The dry red fruit was lovely with excellent minerality and simply amazing earthy aromas. The finish was long and full of flavor.

1982 Dom Perignon Rose – This is the best 82 DP Rose I have had to date. We broke the seal on an OWC for this bottle and the impeccable provenance was showing in spades. Fresh strawberries were all over the nose  with freshly baked brioche and crazy rhubarb on the finish.

1982 Dom Perignon – This DP was also showing exceedingly well with a yeasty nose and plenty of citrus on the palate.

1995 Rene Lamy Montrachet – Simply wow. With all the great wines on the table this one was keep right up there with them showing stunning acidity and minerality not to mention the beautiful tropical fruit of bananas foster and pineapple. Can I say it again, WOW!

1990 Henri Gouges NSG 1er Les Pruliers – This was a good bottle and on any other night been supurbe but with the company it simply fell short. Pretty on the nose but never exceedingly provocative this wine was good but was for sure over shadowed.

1994 Leroy Meursault – There was nothing wrong with this wine technically but the simple fact of the matter was it was not great. Its prime was probably 1-3 years after release and even then it might not have shown very brightly… Very disappointing.

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Seavey Cabernet Sauvignon Vertical Tasting: 1990-2009

Last Friday will go down in the history of Graileys as the night we all survived a 20-year onslaught of Seavey Vineyard Cabernets and lived to tell the tale.

 

Twenty five brave members started trickling in around 6pm for a night of serious libation. With Winemaker Jim Duane on hand to lead the tasting, we had some work to do sniffing and sipping through Seavey Cabernets from 1990 through 2009 harvests. This line-up showcased everything that Seavey has ever produced. They typically hold back 20% of each harvest for their library and all the wines came straight from the winery.

From the decade of the 1990s, there was a general consensus that 1991, 1993, and 1995 were knockouts!

 

 

The 1991 Seavey Vineyard Cabernet Sauvignon was elegant and complex weaving a layered bouquet and flavors of tobacco, earth, spices, incense, and dried flowers. It was wonderfully fresh on the palate with a nice thread of acidity that kept the wine’s finish going for a few seconds. I enjoyed the vibrant quality to this wine.

The 1993 Seavey Cabernet Sauvignon showed more seductive, black fruited aromatics reminiscent of plums, black cherries, blackberries, licorice, and a touch of eucalyptus/menthol. Next to the 1991, this showed more chewy tannins and greater density on the palate.

The 1995 Seavey Cabernet Sauvignon showed structure and richness and a healthy dose of firm tannins. Ripe cassis, blackcurrants with sweet oak nuance (mocha/roasted espresso beans), cedar, and loamy earth coated the palate with the sappy tannins getting you on the finish. This is still youthful with all that primary fruit soaking the remarkable structure of this wine. I’d like to see this in another 3-5 years.

Both the 1994 and 1997 Seavey Cabernet Sauvignon had a touch of brett, not completely off but nevertheless, it seemed tainted. I was a bit disappointed with the showing of the 1994 as we’ve had incredible experience from this vintage of Napa Cabernets. Colgin Herb Lamb, Harlan, and Dominus all come to mind as phenomenal examples from Napa’s 1994 harvest.

The 1999 Seavey Cabernet Sauvignon was a baby with a tight, firm tannic structure currently burying the wine’s smoky cedar, blackberries and plum notes. The concentration and structure are evident in this wine; it just needs to shed some of that awkward baby fat to allow the rich fruitiness to come through.

Of the 2000s, I was impressed by the 2003 Seavey Cabernet Sauvignon with its rich crème de cassis, vanilla, tobacco, licorice, and toasty oak flavors coating the palate. It was opulent, lush and almost creamy in texture. Supple tannins and great acidity. Great balance. This showed really well for a young Seavey Cabernet.

The 2004 Seavey Cabernet Sauvignon was equally expressive with crushed blackberries, blackcurrants, gravelly notes, cedar, roasted coffee undertones and a hint of eucalyptus. I thought the 2004 showed more complexity and elegance relative to the 2003 bottling. The tannins were more pronounced here. Sappy finish marked by cedar/eucalyptus. This is a mouthful of a wine that has the stuffing and balance to age another decade or so in the cellar.

The late 2000s Seavey Cabernet Sauvignons are simply massive wines that require patience and further bottle age to show their true character. Right now, the 2007 Seavey Cabernet Sauvignon, although showing beautiful perfume (dark chocolate, black raspberries, and dried flowers) would need to be decanted at least 2-3 hours to relatively soften all those youthful, drying tannins and allow some of that fruit/chocolatey notes to peek through.

As everyone started suffering palate fatigue, I started seeing a parade of Champagnes being popped open presumably to cleanse everyone’s Cabernet-tainted palates. I saw a 1988 Cristal, a 1990 Dom Perignon and a 2002 Billecart-Salmon Cuvee Elizabeth getting passed around.

And amid the growing conversational murmur in the room, there was a palpable feeling that all is well in the world of Graileys members. It doesn’t take much – only a 20-year vertical and a few Tete du Cuvees.

 

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Dom Perignon Vertical!

By: AJ McClellan

Dom has managed to find a special place in the hearts of our members here at Graileys. While young the wine tends to be a little astringent and awkward but after some time in the bottle this wine flourishes showing beautiful honeyed notes and exceptional depth.

Last week a member decided to put together a small vertical of some of the more spectacular vintages of Dom in the 80’s…

1982 Dom Perignon – Still one of my favorites, the 82 is simply gorgeous right now! Notes of honey, wildflower, quince, cooked yellow pear, and crushed limestone fill the glass on the nose. The palate is no less titillating showing great acidity and unbelievable complexities.

1985 Don Perignon – The 85 is a little more linear than the 82 but I think that with some more time in the bottle it will round out and be absolutely wonderful. The notes of honey and caramel are still there but not quite as well integrated. The palate is still young and tight but shows great promise!

1988 Dom Perignon – The 88 was great but not showing as well as the other Dom’s… This wine still needs some time in the bottle. Notes of pear, lime, lemon, and some baking spice.

1990 Dom Perignon – I was very impressed by the 90, it was the youngest wine of the group but it was very open and showing beautifully. I think that in time this might be the best of the bunch! Wow…

1982 Dom Perignon Rose – The rose was a real treat! Bold as brass with huge dried strawberry, honey drizzled raspberries, and a toasted broche that was just stunning. It is hard to beat aged Dom Rose…

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Star-struck

There is a moment at Graileys when a night suddenly goes from being great to something more epic. Last Friday, it changed for me when member John W opened the 1989 Margaux whose stunningly complex aromatics of blackcurrants, blackberries, gravel, coffee and dried tobacco leaves had me swooning. The palate was even more dramatic and memorable: satin-textured, just gently coating every inch of my taste buds with sweet black fruits, cassis, dried herbs, iron-metallic minerality, dusty tannins and a lovely finish tinged with roasted espresso beans. Vibrant, aromatic, rich yet elegant and super long finish.

I instinctively grabbed my glass of 1994 Dunn Howell Mountain Cabernet Sauvignon (Magnum) for comparison and was immediately hit with intense and sweeter aromatics of blueberries, plums, black licorice, mocha and dried flowers. Such intensity was likewise apparent on the dense, concentrated, and full bodied palate. Chunkier tannins although resolved revealing a supple texture. This is the second time I’ve had this wine and it has been consistent. When we had our Members Appreciation Night in January, this was voted WOTN in a line-up of 30+ remarkable bottles – which included a 1982 Pichon Lalande – tasted blind. This wine’s flavor concentration and structural components suggest another 20 years or so of potential aging developing a more savory, eucalyptus-y complexity and refining the tannins even more. This revealed its New World upbringing next to the ’89 Margaux with its fruitiness and sweeter oak nuances. Thank you, Keith and Jean Ann – great victory lap!

Matt J’s 1986 Quintarelli Ca del Merlot was a nice treat. Initially tainted with VA reminiscent of nail polish or varnish… thankfully, that blew off quickly revealing raisins, plums, red licorice, smoke, cherries, and earth. Full bodied and opulent with a nice thread of acidity that kept the wine nicely vibrant.

And because this is Graileys, a taste of 1996 Dom Perignon Oenotheque was in the ready to help ‘cleanse’ my palate. This is definitely a baby with razor sharp focus buzzing with stony minerality, toast, citrus, white flowers and apple aromas and flavors. The palate is full-bodied, firmly structured, nervy with very high acidity that it seemed linear initially. With time in glass, I thought, this showed a deeper toastiness, baked pastry  and brioche flavor profile as well as a creamier texture. This has decades ahead of its life.

Our patron of more esoteric wine finds, Dr. E, was also in armed with a NV Doyard Cuvee Vendemiaire. From 100% Chardonnay, this was lean and mean hitting my palate with super high acidity and lemon, orange peel and mineral flavors. Medium-bodied, elegant with medium finish. This was an interesting Champagne and the first time I’ve ever tried this wine.

Just in time, member John J walked in and managed to grab a little sip of that killer ’89 Margaux. He generously grabbed a bottle of 1990 Pichon Baron to share around the table. Graphite, cassis, blackberries, spice, cedar, tobacco and earth notes emanated from the glass. Full bodied and well structured with well-integrated, supple tannins and lengthy finish. This has always been one of my favorite vintages of Pichon Baron and this did not disappoint. As the wine sat in the glass, it revealed even more enticing black and blue fruits along with licorice and an opulent mouthfeel.

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That’s Amore…

By: Ryan Tedder

We were blessed to drink this wine earlier this week. It was a life changer for me.  Below are my tasting notes…drink this wine if you find it! Cheers!

Site: Pale garnet medium saturated core going to an orange mid-size rim variation with bricking at the edge. Light amount of silty sediment.

Nose: Initially: Slight notes of VA (nail-polish, shoe polish, varnish) and Brett (dried leather), brown sugar, walnuts, and dried roses with a touch of tar and maple and almost no fruit but musky aromas of wet and dried leaves and mushroom.

After about 40 minutes: The aromas became intoxicating and complex with sweet tobacco, saddle leather, truffle, sandalwood, maple, cigar wrapper, bourbon, almond, dried raspberry, red currant, and marello cherry, red licorice, dried gravel, dried leaves, pine needles, truffle, and and and… it was almost overwhelming…

Palate: The palate mirrored the nose on all the flavors but initially it had a still present tannic tug on the palate and a note of stale black tea. With air the tannins unfolded and created lift for all of the savory nuance of the wine in the attack, fruit and spice in the mid-palate, and umami and dried forest flavors that characterized the never-ending finish.

Overall impression – Holy shit that was amazing wine!!! The best Barolo with age I have ever had without question.

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Remoissenet Action

It was Monday in July in Dallas… everyone’s gone on to better things and cooler climes, right? Partly. Member Bill S has been MIA for the past few weeks so when he walked in, he made a beeline for his locker and presented me with his finds behind the bar.

First in the bucket was a 2000 Remoissenet Bienvenues Batard Montrachet which showed just a touch of oxidative characteristic – a sherry/roasted nuts combo – to its core of pear and white peach notes. The palate was full bodied with a rich, dense structure and an expansive mouthfeel packing hazelnuts, oatmeal, quince, Asian pear and honeysuckle flavors. A twist of pear and Meyer lemon undertones on the zesty finish.

A 1989 Remoissenet Musigny Vieilles Vignes was up next and this was showing amazingly well. Penetrating iron-mineral tang, red fruits, smoke and dried flowers on the nose followed by a palate that was pure seduction. Silky in texture, elegant, vibrant with high-toned flavors. Great intensity and freshness. I love this wine!

Since it was a relatively quiet Monday and I was itching for a run before dinner, I thought it was time to scoot out of here. I walked in the next day and there was a line-up of 1965, 1971, and 1973 Penfolds Grange that I missed. Really, on a Monday afternoon?

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Classic Mercedes and Cherry Red Corvettes

By: Ryan Tedder

Every time I talk to people about Napa Cab I break them down into 2 styles. An easy vehicle (no pun intended) to use is automobiles.  We drank some great vino with Ivan and the crew and the Cabs definitely fell into these camps.

The classic Mercedes cars of the group represent classic wines of higher acid, more earth, more pronounced green notes, lower alcohol and more Bordelais notes.  The 1985 Diamond Creek Volcanic Hill Cabernet was spectacular with loads of iron, cigar wrapper, dried and brandied black cherry, red currant, and dried mint and eucalyptus.  There was a meaty component to go with the sweet black fruit and long finish that blossomed with some air.  Cedar, graphite and integrated oak spice framed this complex wine that was drinking at its peak. The 1999 Clos du Val Cabernet was another wine of contemplation and it definitely surprised. Leather, dried red fruit, red licorice, spice, gravel and tobacco.  This Cab was still pretty would up and was sure to unwind and become more tertiary with time.  Both of these wines needed to be contemplated, noticed, thoughtfully drank and appealed to the wine bulls that like to walk down the hill instead of run.  Very much the classic Mercedes style of Napa Cab.

For the other Cabs think about National Lampoons Vacation to Wally World with Clark Griswold.  The scene with Christie Brinkley in her bright red sports car toying with Clark on the highway.  Great Napa Cabs that taste like candy and have no hard edges and pair well with peanut butter remind me of this scene. Especially wines from St. Helena, Oakville, Rutherford and Calistoga.  They are the speeding cherry red corvettes with the buxom blonde of the wine world.  2006 Winter Cabernet was impressive for its saturation of purple and black fruits, luxurious mocha, coffee bean, chocolate covered cherry French oak, gobs of yoohoo, fudge, blackberry pie, and new money. Sadly this is one of the last vintages of this great wine.  Seek this out and drink!  The 2010 Entre Nous Cabernet by Kristine Ashe was tame compared to the Winter but was no less enjoyable. The fruit profile was of saturated cherries, cherry cordial, wild strawberries, roses, raspberry compote, sweet tobacco, and milk chocolate. Seamlessly powerful and coy on the palate-this winery is coming into its own with each successive vintage. Great stuff.  Drive fast and take chances kind of wines.

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