Giacosa, I Love You!

By: AJ McClellan

Yesterday was a bountiful feast of fantastic wines. We had a great group of members in along with another group who were there for a charity dinner that Simon had donated to his school. From beginning to ead all of the wines that we pulled out where fantastic but the grand finale, the 85 Giacosa Red Label was what set this day apart in Graileys history.

 

2009 Amon-Ra – Full juicy and ripe with black fruits and huge soft tannins.

1994 Dominus  – This was my second time to try this bottle and it was just as good as I remember it being. Soft red and black fruits with an elegant earthy aroma that would put me in the mind of a great Bordeaux. The body was plush showing a great complexity that gives me hope for other California Cabernets.

2007 Araujo Cabernet Sauvignon – Another great example of California Cabernet. Parker rated this wine 90 points and I think that was an embarrassingly inadequate scoring for this wine. The fruit is ripe and complex with fresh cherries and currants with a subtle hint of wood spice and a very pleasant elegant earthy undertone. I think in years to come this will be a great Cabernet.

1982 Ducru Beaucaillou – Wow, a contestant for wine of the night indeed. Rich earthy notes of tilled earth and dry flowers. The fruit was dry but still prevalent adding another level of complexity to this classic Bordeaux. A great bottle of wine.

1982 Branaire Ducru – This was a quaffable bottle of Bordeaux that is ready to drink now. Soft fruits with elegant earth and slight cooking spice.

1999 Groffier Chambolle Musigny 1er Les Amoureuses – Brilliant cherry notes that allowed me to peg this bottle as a Groffier when tasting it blind. Great mineral notes showing blue and white rock combines with sweet red fruits and dry tobacco leaves.

1985 Bruno Giacosa Barbaresco Santo Stefano di Neive Red Label – This wine blew me away!! The glass was full of decadent earthy notes so complex that they would resemble one of the finest 10 course meals a grub worm could possibly imagine. The palate was a dream of dusty fruits filled with cigar smoke and rich earthy spices piquing with fresh notes of warm soil basking in the morning sun. This is what wine is all about.

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Chateau Margaux Winemaker Tasting

By: AJ McClellan

We had a great tasting with the senior VP for Chateau Margaux, Aurelien Valance, as our guest of honor. We ran into a slight kink the day before the tasting was scheduled to begin. All of the wines that we had been planning on tasting had gotten stuck in customs leaving us a room full of clients but no wines. Luckily we were able to dip into our cellar to salvage the event with bottles of 78 Margaux and two magnums of 89 and 90 Margaux.

 

2009 Pavillon Blanc – A very pleasant white wine with notes of crème fresh, peach, apricot, and coconut. The palate was crisp and clean with a great length and a slight note of green pear on the finish.

1990 Pavillon Rouge – Sweet red currants, black cherries, and a note of sour earth and big barnyard. An easy drinking bottle that is drinking great right now.

1978 Margaux – Big earth with dry prunes and dry currants. There was a substantial earthiness to the wine with notes of compost, forest floor, and vegetable ash. This bottle was drinking great out of the shoot and will continue to drink for another 5 years.

1989 Margaux Magnum – This wine was good but not as good as I was hoping. In the bottles defense, there might have been a hint of cork in the bottle. No one noticed a flaw except Phil and myself but I sear every once in a while there was a little tca in the glass… Smoke and tobacco on the nose with black fruits and some cooking spices. The palate showed great earth notes and very nice fruits. The wine toed the line of greatness but didn’t quite get there.

1990 Margaux Magnum – Extremely complex with tobacco, light chocolate, plums, black cherries, and blueberry. The palate was weighty with an excellent mid-palate showing sweet black fruits and amazing earthy richness. A slight hint of liquorish on the finish.

 

After the official tasting was over it was time to pull out some of the big guns for our esteemed guest. All of the members went to their lockers while we pull out a few tricks of our own….

 

2004 Pavillon Blanc – I blinded this as Pape Clement blanc. Great structure and a gravely minerality combined with tropical fruit.

1953 Remoissent Clos Vougeot GC – Pure earth with hints of old moldy log, forest floor, old leather, and sweaty horse hides. A sweet must with dry flowers and old cherry warheads rewarded the palate and made you want to savor the long lasting finish of tilled earth and wild mushrooms.

1997 Guigal La Turque – As always a show stopper. The bottle was showing sweet ripe fruits that made me think of new world until it opened up and started to show the classic pepper, leather, tobacco, and meaty notes we have all come to know and love from Guigal wines.

1985 Cos d’Estournel – This bottle of 85 was showing differently than what I am used to from Cos. It had a slight green note of cut grass, nothing offensive, just different than what I expected. The fruit was bright  with a earthy backing and great rocky finish.

1978 Remoissenet Chambertin GC – This bottle was interesting, showing dry fruit and big earth but slightly disconjointed. Maybe a little bit of oxidization? There was subtle hint of rusty nail.

1994 Domaine Armond Rousseau Chambertin GC – Wow. Fresh strawberry patch with intermingled with a spice garden and fresh summer flowers. There was a hint of compost made from dry leaves, sweet red fruits, and a jumbled handful of crushed rocks, dried flowers, and jasmine. Very complex and fresh in the glass.

2008 Sine Qua Non B20 – As always massive fruit with a complex spice aroma backed by Cote Rotie like earth and smokiness.

1996 Comte Armond Pommard 1er Clos de Epeneaux – I was very happy with this wine. After sitting open for three hours it blew up showing complex fruit and earth aromas with a hint of slate. A very complex wine with a lengthy finish and amazing depth and character.

1955 Dows – Good old Dow’s showing nutmeg, almonds, cinnamon, and dry currants. Fantastic nutty finish.

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From the Cellar of Greg and Carol Booth

By: Philip Robert

Last night we hosted a special gathering for the birthday of Don Nelson and a celebration of our hostesses’ visit to Lafite in 1982.  Main event wines were served with guests only knowing that one was Cali and the other was Bordeaux.  We were lucky to have in attendance with us two of Dallas’ finest Chefs – Dean Fearing of “Fearing’s Restaurant” and Kent Rathbun of “Abacus” along with Kent’s wife Tracy who partnered with Dean’s wife Lynae to create “Shinsei”.  Our own Derrick Paez created some fabulous bites to go along with the wine.

Some quick notes

Opener:

00 Comtes Lafon Meursault Clos de la Barre - Wow, this was excellent.  Tons of minerality and cut, lemon zest and citrus fruit.  A real treat.

79 Leoville Las Cases - Brilliant expression of Bordeaux, beautiful on the nose, dark fruits and  smokiness. Lots of life ahead.

97 Chapoutier Cote Rotie la Mordoree - Bacon and iron on the nose, didn’t get to spend much time with this one as things got rolling.  Nice and pleasant to drink and good expression of Cote Rotie.

Main event:

82 Dom Perignon - This was absolutely beautiful with a little toasty hazelnut on the nose. Tart green apple and zest on the palate, delish.

First Reds:

70 Lafite Magnum - Opened, tasted and recorked one hour prior to serving.  Classic older Lafite and unmistakably Bordeaux.  Hint of cocoa powder and dusty soft black currant.

74 Stags Leap Cabernet Sauvignon - I was really surprised at how much life this had in it.  Dusty red and black fruit and a bit of leather.  I preferred this initially to the Lafite, but it fell off in the space of an hour while the Lafite gained momentum.

Everyone was able to discern between the two.

Round two:

88 Mouton - This was opened 2 hours prior to serving, and it was nice and dark dense and brooding.  A powerful muscular wine still with fine tannin and ripe currant and plum.  A fine showing.

84 Opus One - A big disappointment and it didn’t show nearly as well as the rest.  Eucalyptus and mint on the palate with dried fruit and a little thin.

This one fooled some people but the eucalyptus notes gave the Opus away.

Round three: a little twist

76 Dom Perignon from Mag - This had an amber color to it and just a touch of honeyed oxidation, but showed beautifully with brioche and a bit of yeast.  Complex notes and really showed well. A real treat.

59 Pichon Lalande - Wow..just wow.  Guesses around the table ranged from late 70s to early 90s Bordeaux.  When revealed everyone was stunned.  Still nice and dark with a touch of bricking around the rim, but so fresh and lively on the palate.  Dark dusty plum, graphite and tobacco flavors.  One of my favorites of the evening.

With the end of the formal tasting out came some treats to have with cake!

80 Dom Perignon from Mag - This was my favorite champagne of the evening, it just blew me away.  Danced on the palate so vibrant and fresh.  Just kept going back to it again and again.  Exquisite.

86 Pol Roger Sir Winston Churchill Mag – This had a little oxidative characteristic and was complex with almond and hazelnuts.  A treat.

66 Ducru Beaucaillou - Dark and dense in color, classic St. Julien with earthiness, dark red and black fruits and nicely balanced.  Excellent

99 Monbousquet – I only got a small pour of this as it was the end of the evening, a little oak and cocoa.

What a super evening and many thanks to all those who came and celebrated a couple of special occasions – especially Carol who generously pulled many of these wines from her cellar.

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Prerequisite for flying.

By: AJ McClellan

While the real party was last night we couldn’t let Dave get on the plane without a little something to drink, flying is such thirsty business you know…

NV Krug Grand Cuvee – Krug, the Champagne of Champagnes. Soft effervescence with a tingle of apricot and white peach scraped off of a limestone wall.

1992 Marcassin Lorenzo Chardonnay – Phil opened this bad boy for us and boy was it excellent! Back when we did the Marcassin tasting this wine showed up as wine of the night, if anything we underrated it. Stunning popcorn with rocking minerality and perfectly ripe stone fruit. The palate showed zingy acidity and complex floral notes ending with a lovely finish. Every ten minutes the wine morphed into something new showing pear wax then huge mango and papaya, and finally ending up with peach and a mouthful of schist. What a stunning wine!

2000 Domaine Ramonet Batard Montrachet GC – If anything could give the Marcassin a run for its money it would be this bottle. The nose showed crisp key lime pie with a sweet slice of peach accenting the sour lime. The palate spoke of blooming summer flowers and an abundance of white rock. This is a masterful bottle of wine.

1993 Domaine Leflaive Puligny Montrachet 1er Les Folatieres – Just when you think things couldn’t get any better Domaine flavor flave comes out form the cellar. With a rich boisterous nose of honeysuckle and daisies followed by a palate of peaches and quince this bottle was drinking like a champ.

1991 Heitz Martha’s Vineyard – We blinded the group on this wine. Simon was the first to speak up announcing with certainty that it was an early 90’s Heritz. The wine is unmistakable with huge spearmint laced with eucalyptus and dark fruit. A fantastic example of California Cabernet and yet another example of a Cali Cab that can stand up against the big boys of Bordeaux.

1991 Camille Giroud Bonnes Mares GC – So, as embarrassing as it is to announce this, I called this Barbaresco in a blind tasting. I know, I know. But in my defense the wine showed a slight orange rim and smelt of dusty cherry, leather, and huge red flowers. The palate was massive with a light body and tannins that were gripping for a wine with 20 years of age on it. After an hour in the glass the wine mellowed out and started acting more appropriately for a Pinot Noir.

1988 La Mission Haut Brion – This is the fourth time I have had this bottle and it seems to taste very different every time. Normally the wine starts out watery with a distinct cardboard note then flourishes to show great fruit and a full body after being opened for an hour or two. This bottle was drinking great out of the gate with classic Bordeaux earth and a great plum extract on the finish.

2007 Carter Coliseum Cabernet Sauvignon – After a day of dinking older wines this bottle was much like desert. Dark and heavy with chewy chocolate and sweet black fruits. The wine was complex and full of energetic fruits and colossal spices, but boy was it sweet after the lineup we had…

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Simon got mad at Dave…

By: AJ McClellan

It was Dave’s last night in town yesterday and in true Graileys fashion we had a blowout party to celebrate his leaving. The best part of the night was when Dave decided to pop the 90 Rousseau and after we were half way through the bottle Phil checked the price and announced that we were drinking a $3600 dollar bottle. Simon flashed red for a split second till he realized we were drinking the Charmes Chambertin instead of the Chambertin. We decide the price to be a misprint and went on drinking the wine.

 

1990 Armand Rousseau Charmes Chambertin GC – Pale amber in color. The nose was floral with rich earthy aromas and opulent fruit notes of cherry and raspberry. The palate was soft and tender with silky tannins that melted in your mouth and a complexity that would make a rubik’s cube blush.

2007 Deforville Barbaresco – A classic Barbaresco, the wine was gripping with a mountain of tannins backed by crisp fruit and a ultra dry finish of slate and crushed gravel.

1982 Beychevelle – The Beychevelle was drinking like a champ. The wine was showing dark fruits, graphite, roses, and forest floor on the nose. The palate was smooth and well developed with elegant tannins and a long complex finish.

1983 Haut Brion – There was a little doubt as to whether the bottle was corked or not but after some time in the glass any flaws blew off and the gravely minerality that is so identifiable in Haut Brion started to flourish. Dark plums, cassis, and black cherries danced on the palate over a a bed of rose pedals strewn across a rocky soil.

1999 Groffier Chambolle Musigny 1er Les Amoureuses – Groffier is fast becoming one of my favorite producers of Burgundy. Last night’s bottle of Les Amoureuses was brilliant showing bright red cherries, red currants, limestone, bramble, and dark earth.

1999 Domaine Pierre Amiot Clos de la Roche GC – Relatively simple for Grand Cru wine but still very nice. Easy going fruit with a mellow mineral note. The finish was light and forward.

1975 Pichon Lalande – This was possibly the wine of the night. We blind tasted it around the table and while most people called Bordeaux and a few even nailed it as Pichon, everyone agreed that it could not be more than 15 years old. Fresh and vibrant on the nose the wine showed notes of currant, plum, cassis, lavender, forest floor, and tilled earth.

1997 Delas Freres Cote Rotie La Landonne – Bacon, bacon, bacon, and more bacon! Yummy… A great bottle of wine, opened at the beginning of the night it continued to get better and better the longer it was open. Smoked quail, black pepper, leather, and spice.

1997 Mt. Eden Estate Chardonnay – We opened this up early in the day and it was served blind pop and pour.  This was nailed as a mid 90’s Mt. Eden by AJ and Simon.  This had everything that I love about old school California Chardonnay.  The fruit was still vibrant and carried notes of pineapple, stone fruit, white peaches, a touch of honey with crisp minerality.  It gained weight and more complexity in the glass over several hours and was a fantastic treat.

2008 Kistler Noisetiers Chardonnay – I really enjoyed this wine.  Bright fruit, lemon zest and a well-balanced integration of oak and fruit.  I can see this going many years but was very enjoyable at such a young age.

2001 Georges Mugneret Chambolle Musigny Feusselottes – I was really impressed by this wine.  Such a silky texture, classic Chambolle, with lovely red fruit, currant and spice.  Gorgeous nose of Asian five spice, a hint of black tea and mushrooms.  Laser focus with a strong backbone of acidity.

1998 Jadot Clos de Beze – This wine was much more masculine when compared to the rest of the burgundy bretheren last night.  It had broader shoulders and a dark brooding fruit profile of blackberries and rasberries.  Muscular without weight.

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A Rainy Day

By: AJ McClellan

Simon and Dave went out to the baseball game yesterday but got rained out and decided to start drinking.  Because of the weather we only had a few members stop by, but what we lacked in quantity we made up for in exuberance. Bottle after bottle came out of the back as the members decide that we could outlast the rain.

 

2004 Hartwell Cabernet Sauvignon – This bottle, made by Andy Ericson, shows all the telltale signs of quality from one of my favorite Californian winemakers. The first thing that comes to mind when you try the bottle is the superb balance a perfect harmony of fruit, tannin, and acid. I feel that this bottle is in its prime right now and will continue to get better for another 2-4 years.

2006 Groth Reserve Cabernet Sauvignon – This wine is just starting to smooth out, showing semi-rough tannins and ultra ripe fruits it needs another couple of years in the bottle before ultimate drinking pleasure can be achieved.

2007 O’Shaughnessy Howell Mountain Cabernet Sauvignon – I think this wine is drinking great out of the gate. In part this wines drinkability is due to the fantastic 2007 vintage but it is also due to the unique winemaking style of Sean Capiaux.

NV Ruinart – This bottle is always a treat to drink. Soft effervescence with rich pear and peach notes backed by a crisp acidity and finishing with a long mineral annotation of limestone and schist.

1993 Louis Jadot Batard Montrachet – This wine was showing slight signs of oxidization but still drinkable. The nose had the honeyed, nutty aromas of a wine beginning its decent into oxidization but the palate was still lively with a pleasant fresh fruit flavor and nice acidity.

1993 Louis Jadot Chevalier Montrachet – Drinking much better than its Batard brother the Chevalier was singing with tropical fruits and bright citrus on the nose. The palate was fresh and clean with a subtle yellow rose note and refreshing acidity.

1990 Beringer Private Reserve Cabernet Sauvignon – Beringer is one of my favorite Cali Cabs that consistently performs with age in the bottle. This 90 was no exception to the rule showing a very Bordeaux-esque nose of barnyard and leather and a palate of dusty red and black cherries and old cooking spice.

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Gruaud Larose Tasting

By: AJ McClellan

We had David Patrick Launay come into Graileys yesterday to taste us on his 2006 release of Gruaud Larose, 2007 release of Larose de Gruaud, and 2006 release Larose de Gruaud. The wines were drinking great, as one of my favorite 2nd growths of Saint Julien I was very happy to see the continued quality of the wine.

2006 Gruaud Larose – Big and bold but with a silkyness to the tannins that tells me this wine will age very well. The fruit was dark and ripe balanced very well with smoke and leather and a great mineral note.

2007 Larose de Gruaud – While it is a little lighter in style it is much more approachable while young. Great fruit with excellent structure and elegance.

2006 Larose de Gruaud – Bolder in style with darker fruits. The tannins are a little rougher but that will smooth out with time.

1990 Gruaud Larose –  I was very impressed with this wine. The nose was plush with great dark fruits and freshly tilled earth. The palate showed great spice with subtle leather and the great Bordeaux funk.

2006 Rivers Marie – Classic Thomas Rivers Brown wine. Great balance with huge fruit and rich concentrated flavors.

2007 Colome Reserva – This was a very good little Malbec. Excellent balance with jammy black and blue fruits followed by fresh flowers and cooking spices.

1993 Giacosa Garanitta – For a bottom of the line Giacosa this wine drinks like a wine twice its price. Classic hard tannins with sour cherry and cigar butt. The fruit was light and elegant with a mountain of tannins backing it up.

2006 Cheval de Andes – We blinded Simon on this wine and he called is Corra (one of my favorite Cali Cabs) considering that this wine is half the price of Corra I will take that as a compliment. Great extracted fruits with structured tannins and great balance.

1997 Jarvis Merlot Magnum – Unfortunately this wine showed alot of asphalt road and burnt rubber tires.

2006 Bodega Chacra Treinta y Dos – A great bottle of wine showing bright red fruits and huge spice. There was enough earth to make me think of a a great Burgundian wine but the ripe fruit and huge spice makes you think twice as to the origin of this wine.

2007 Copain Tous Ensemble Pinot Noir – Bright red fruits with a backing of smoke. A bigger style of wine for a Pinot but still retaining a great balance and excellent complexity

1975 Silver Oak Alexander Valley – This Silver Oak was drinking surprisingly well. Still plenty of fruit with a subtle backing of tannins and a long finish of tobacco and spice.

1999 Hudelot Noellat Romanee st Vivant – Classic Noellat, great earthy minerality, well structured fruit, laser like acidity, and excellent balance.

1992 Dominus – This was my wine of the night. When I was blinding this wine I first called it a great left bank Bordeaux but upon deeper inspection the tell tale jalapeño that I always get from Dominus came out and keyed me off. I called the wine 94 Dominus.

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Back Room Friday: Bonnes Mares and Richebourg

By: AJ McClellan

Friday was our very first backroom tasting night. Although we held it at the bar in the front there was a great lineup with a few surprises in store for those who attended. The theme of the night was Burgundy, and not just any Burgundy but Bonnes Mares and Richebourg! Two of my absolute favorite vineyards. With Bonnes Mares totaling just over 40 acres and producing only 70,000 bottle for the world you can see why it is a commodity. Then you look at Richebourg, nestled up next to the famed Romanee Conti vineyard and comprised of a scant 18 acres which produces only 26,000 bottles this is one of the premier vineyards of Burgundy.

 

1995 Remoissenet Montrachet  - A beautiful wine, especially after being allowed to open for a couple of hours. Light tropical fruits with heavy peach and pear notes followed by gripping minerality and subtle floral notes.

1990 Remoissenet Richebourg – I was a little iffy on this bottle at first but after being open for an hour the wine flourished to show great depth of earth and dark fruit with a hint of smoke and barbeque.

1999 Groffier Bonnes Mares – This wine was beautiful, like laying in a strawberry field. Fresh crushed strawberries with a great limestone minerality backing and subtle floral notes of fresh summer.

1996 Louis Jadot Richebourg – Again with big earth and a slight note of smoke. Very rustic in the glass with dark fruits and stone gravel paired with smoked quail.

1998 Domaine Comte Georges de Vogue Bonnes Mares – I was looking forward to this bottle the most and it was very slow to open, before the tasting we had the wines open for almost an hour in a half and the Vogue was still tight and giving off very little. After another 2 hours the wine started to unfurl its beautiful red fruits and great limestone minerality. At the end of the night this wine was drinking beautifully with great minerality, beautiful fruit, and a solid floral backdrop.

1999 Hudelot Noellat Richebourg – As a surprise we dropped in two more wines for the tasting. The Noellat was brilliant, possibly my wine of the night. You again get the tell-tale Richebourg signs of dark fruit, almost Hermitage like leather, smoke, and meat but with a subtleness that is hard to come by outside of the Pinot Noir grape. Very complex.

1969 Remoissenet Gevrey Chambertin les Combottes –  As a ringer we threw in a Gevrey. The Combottes vineyard lays about a mile away from Bonnes Mares but it could not be more different. More dark fruit with a structured backbone and deep earthy notes. Beautiful finesse for a wine with 40 years of age, and drinking like a champ.

 

After the Tasting it was time to sit back down and enjoy some great bottles of wine.

 

2000 Pierre Peters Les Chetillons –  Always a favorite of mine, fresh apricots and peaches with a rock hard minerality and fresh acidity.

2006 Dog Point Sauvignon Blanc Section 94 – I love this wine for its freshness and uniqueness. Huge tropical fruit, grapefruit, pineapple, and kiwi. I could smell the wine across the table when it was opened. Great minerality with a firm texture in the mouth.

1997 Guigal La Mouline – For a Rhone from a lesser vintage this bottle was excellent, but hey, its Guigal… Smoke, bacon fat, tar, leather, pepper, cinnamon, spice, plum, tobacco, and roses. A beautiful wine that came close to stealing the show.

1995 La Nerth Chateauneuf do Pape Cuvee des Cadettes – We have had this wine on several occasions and it has been a stud every time we open it. Classic CDP with dark cherries, bramble, tilled earth, and huge cooking spices.

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It is good to be home.

By: AJ McClellan

Sometimes you need a vacation from the vacation and Graileys is the perfect place for that. It is good to be home. We had a great group of semi-jealous members drop in last night to hear all about the trip. It’s hard to tell a proper story without a bit of vino to wet the windpipes so we cracked some classic wines for the table and regaled our members with stories from across the pond…

 

1997 Castello Del Rampolla – This was a very interesting wine, a Cabernet Sauvignon/Sangiovese blend from Tuscany with a 97 point backing from Wine Spectator. When I first tasted it the wine was full of dark purple fruit with subtle black pepper and big spicy leather. I set the glass aside and came back to it a few hours later… the wine had fallen on its face, gone completely flat, and devoid of life…  disappointing…

1993 Louis Jadot Chevalier Montrachet GC – Honey comb with a dusting of vanilla, great ripe pears, and sour apples. Beautiful complex mineral notes with more honey and a long finish of soft limestone, ripe pineapple, and good old home cooking spice.

1998 Domaine Michel Niellon Chassagne Montrachet 1er Les Vergers – Slight signs of oxidization with a touch of caramel and honeysuckle on the nose. The palate was much fresher than the nose showing crisp fruit and a gripping minerality.

1995 Camille Giroud Nuits Saint Georges 1er Les Cailles – An initial nose of nail polish but it quickly dissipates to show blueberry pop tart and cinnamon, this wine reminds me what spice on Dune would smell like. A slight note of star anise with huge earth notes of wet forest floor. Long finish of dark cherries.

1993 Bruno Giacosa Barbaresco Garantita – A great little Nebbiolo with pure earth nose and a palate of barnyard, leather, smoke, and tar.

1978 Ducru Beaucaillou – Classic Bordeaux with ripe red fruits and apple pie cooking spices. Pipe tobacco and leather straps show on a long finish with Washington apples and ripe red cherries. Classic Bordeaux earth.

1997 Domaine Jean Grivot Echezeaux – Jean Grivot constantly delivers an exceptional bottle of wine. The 97 Echezeaux was superb. A bright nose of red cherry and crisp red currants followed by soft earth and a dash of cooking spice. The palate was well balanced with excellent length.

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Bordeaux: B-o-r-d-e-a-u-x

By: Simon Roberts

What a week! Graileys first member’s trip to the Bordeaux region has been a wonderful experience. A visit to Bordeaux had been a long time goal. I had carefully planned over the past eighteen months, selecting Chateaus visits and accommodations and boy did it pay off. Our first two days were spent at St. Emilion. Our base was the superb Chateau Grand Barrail.  We took an easy afternoon after our long journey, some visited the nearby town of Libourne for a look around and a few drinks, it was our first taste of cobbled streets and picturesque town squares.

We had planned a welcome dinner at St. Emilion’s best restaurant Hostelliere De Plaisance for the first evening located next to the clock tower St. Emilion. Breathtaking is probably the best way to describe the location, panoramic views of the surrounding vineyards with the restaurant nestled in the corner of the square next to the clock tower. A superb meal ensued and the tiredness of the journey took a back seat as dish after dish was served, each dish taking you down a new road of tastes. A good three hours later we ambled back through the cobbled streets to our transport and back to the Chateau for a good night’s sleep. It was a great start to what turned out to be a fantastic experience.

Day two started with a brisk morning walk around the Chateau grounds and breakfast in the old school dining room.  We had a small tasting class in St. Emilion which was both fun and informative.  A great lunch at Gironde Dines on the patio set us up for the afternoon of tasting. We walked off our lunch with a stroll around St. Emilion. Getting a sneak peek at Chateau Ausone at the top of the hill, what strikes you most is the openness of the vineyards. One of the world’s most expensive wines and the vines just sitting there, over a small wall, gnarly vine after vine of greatness.

Our walk meandered through the back of the town walking past Beusejour Duffau onward to the impressive Chateau Canon, our first winery visit.  The tour of the Chateau was informative, interesting and surprising. A trip down the stairs to the cellar and then deeper underground revealed a catacomb of tunnels that reminded me of the Three Musketeers movie, there must have been a half mile of corridors and trails underneath the vineyards, all keeping the ground below the vines at a perfect temp year around, our host pointed out that the vines are never stressed at Canon due to the underground tunnels. I can attest as we sat in the Garden tasting the fruit forward 07 vintage. Ahh Bordeaux!

We left Canon and went on to visit Chateu Pavie Macquin for a very cool tasting hosted by Nicolas Thienpont tasting thru the 09/10 vintages along with Larcis Ducasse and some of his other smaller production labels. Nicolas was very welcoming and we appreciated the time he spent showing us around the vineyard and the cellars. A very nice guy.

The second evening in St. Emilion was free so a few stayed in the village, after the night before’s 5 star gastronomic feast a small bistro was in order. The one we found proved interesting to say the least. Dave and I made the huge mistake of ordering andouiellette sausage…..the less said the better!  It was without doubt the biggest mistake of my life when it comes to ordering food. It tasted like I imagine a dead body would……one that had been recently dug up after 200 years underground, as I said…. the less said the better.

Thursday morning and we are hitting Pauillac and Sauternes. Chateau Latour… ..yes, that’s right, not a bad way to start the day! We were greeted by our host not knowing what to expect, a few pics from the vineyards next to the tower and we were ushered in to a video room. Wine porn! 10 minutes of it, I  must say we all came out a little flustered and still not knowing what was coming next. We were taken below to the cellars, state of the art steel tanks for each plot.  A computer board that looked like a flight deck cockpit that controlled every temperature under the sun and then on to the cellar…rows of 61/82/45/47….vintages going back to the early 1900…more wine porn! We finished off in the tasting room, 06 Paulliac, 05 Le Forts and 04 Latour…Life is good!

An afternoon drive to Langon, just outside of Sauternes was interesting as our lovely French  guide Isobel proceeded to spell out the rivers Gironde and Dordogne for the 50th time. A brief lunch and next up was Chateau Yquem. Pulling into the vineyard was surreal, a wine we have tasted with gusto on many occasions and here we are, in the Chateau…mind-blowing! A great tour and host culminated with a taste of the 07 vintage…Nectar of the gods!

A short drive around the corner and we visit Raymond Lafon. One of the few family owned estates left is situated right next door to Yquem. We were greeted by the portly Jean Pierre Lafon and what a nice genuine guy he was, showing us his vineyard and his beautiful gardens on the property and inviting us into his living room to taste his wine. No heirs and graces here, just a real genuine character from an old school family. This was a truly exceptional experience, from the musty smelling small cellar at the back of the farmhouse to his showpiece speaking Parrot Coco talking away in the kitchen while we tasted his superb wine.

It was tough to leave Lafon, but our last stop of the day was Chateau Smith Haut Lafite, a wonderful winery that reminded me somewhat of a Napa winery, very modern in style with beautiful grounds surrounding the vineyards.  After a tour of the cellar and bottling facility we tasted very impressive 09 Blanc and 05 red, both were showing exceptionally well. The tasting room reminded us of Graileys a little, comfortable leather chairs and a interesting pictures along the walls, little did we know we were sat atop a secret cellar hatch that remotely opened to the downstairs cellar…awesome…just awesome. Suffice to say they impressed us so much we bought an imperial of the 86 and merrily drove off into the sunset with glasses full on our coach.

Onwards to our hotel in the stunning port city of Bordeaux. It is Paris without the hype. Hotel Regent is situated at the heart of the city opposite the very impressive opera house, a bustling square dotted with bars and bistros, smells and characters. I am liking our new camp! A quick change and into the city for our first night, walking through the small city back alleys soaking up the essence if the city and we end up in Sweeney Todd’s English pub…..you guessed it ….burgers/fish and chips and beer..Go figure!

Friday morning greets us with perfect weather, again! 72 degrees and sunny, Does it get any better?  It did. Lunch at Chateau Pichon Baron. The Royals were throwing a wedding of their own in London. Graileys members took it up a notch with a tasting and tour of the most stunning Chateau in Paulliac. Think James Bond movies for the operational side here, some serious money has been invested in the Chateau, they did not miss a trick. We tasted the 2010/09 and 05 vintages with our host Nikolas Santier followed by a surreal lunch in the dining room overlooking the grounds. Mushroom soup for the ages, Duck breast seared to perfection and a desert of cooked peach in red wine followed by a visit to the Chateau to pick up some Mags for our bus ride to our next location.

The trip had come together perfectly, the weather, the synergy of our group, we were all having a blast. Getting on the coach after our fabulous lunch at Pichon Baron I took a minute to take it all in and then it hit me. I realized our next stop was Chateau Lafite.

We had a stunning drive from Pichon Baron to Lafite, famous Chateau’s and vineyards went sailing by the window, too much to take in ! We drove along the picturesque small promenade in Pauillac and continued up the hill toward the plateau vineyard that is Lafite. The winery itself was a hive of activity. We walked through the area where the large wooden vats were housed, some over 20 years old and I pondered of all the great vintages that had been in and out if these vats. The barrel housing room was impressive in its size and that unmistakable oaky smell tantalized the senses again. The best was yet to come as we went deeper underground to the ancient cellars, a ghostly place that had a reverence about it, we stood stunned looking at vintage bottles dating back to the late 1700’s. I keep using the word surreal but it definitely defines this trip. We finished the tasting by sipping on a 95 Lafite overlooking the guys racking the barrels in the vast coliseum like barrel room. I am sure I could hear angels singing! Let’s just say it was like a religious experience!

The days of days continued after Lafite with a dinner at Chateau Phelan Segur hosted by winemaker Fabrice Bacquey. We really appreciated the time Fabrice spent with us. We tasted the 08/9and 10 after the winery tour and then on to dinner tasting 2001/1996/ and 02 out Magnum. The wines were paired with veal which was cooked to perfection. Fabrice has been making the wine at Phelan Segur for over 12 vintages and we got to blind him on the 93 vintage, which of course he nailed. How cool to sit with the winemaker and experience his thoughts on the wines he made.

Saturday morning beckoned, bright sunshine, breakfast in the brasserie at the Regent and onward for a change of pace. A cooking class and the wonderful Chateau Lavergne nestled into the hillside just across the bridge in the Bordeaux suburbs. We were greeted by our host Suzzane, she and her husband own this sprawling estate moving from Paris a decade ago to “Get out if the big city”. This was a fun morning; we took our turn to help in the preparation of our own lunch, a duck confit that reminded me of a French shepherd’s pie. We were split into two teams and enjoyed a quiz on different smells and aromas of wines and some interesting questions on the region and its appellations.

I have mentioned earlier that the trip was building to crescendo each day. I did not think it could get better but each day we took it up a notch and our final tasting did not let us down. We boarded our coach and drove to the sleepy village of Priegnac. How the coach driver squeaked thru the narrow street still amazes me but he did, dropping us off in front of a blue door directly behind the church clock tower in the village square that looked like the same village out of the final battle scene from the movie  Saving Private Ryan. What was behind the Blue door? The best tasting of the trip! Vignobles  Gonet Medeville and their famous Chateau Gillete wines, Champagnes Gonet and some superb Margaux appellation reds and one very special pinot from the Ambonnay.

We were greeted by our hosts, owners Julie and Xavier Gonet Medeville, the winery has been in the family since the 17th century, and both Julie and Xavier made the tasting very special.  They are a warm and generous couple who poured and talked passionately about their family, wines and operation. We tasted 18 wines, 6 different vintages of Sauternes topping it off with a 53 from the cellar. It was astounding as was everything else about the afternoon we spent there. We will be offering these wines direct from the Chateau and I would highly recommend you purchase some, the Sauternes and Champagnes are very unique in style and of the highest quality.

Our trip ended with a farewell dinner at the riverfront restaurant Maison Fleuve,  great food , great friends with some 01 Cheval Blanc and 01 Haut Brion that tasted like this whole trip…truly…. unbelievably good!

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