Celebrations
June 21, 1973

Château Mouton Rothschild elevated from Second Growth to First Growth class in the 1855 Classification of Medoc wines, the only significant change in the 154-year-old classification.

June 22, 1999

Robert Parker, America’s powerful and controversial wine writer/expert, is named a Chevalier dans l’Ordre de la Légion d’Honneur. Only wine critic ever to receive the award.

    Swigs
Chateau China

Hong Kong
Wine and prosperity flow along on the same current of joy. A recent Wall Street Journal story by Laura Santini reports that Hong Kong has become an international wine hub, thanks to the growing appreciation of wine and luxury accompanying the new Chinese economy. (Hong Kong is now Sotheby’s leading wine-auction market.) The city has seen an especially large uptick in business because of the elimination of a 40 percent tax on wine imports (it’s 43 percent on the mainland). The preferred bottle to cement and celebrate a business deal? The 1982 Chateau Lafite Rothschild, which sells for roughtly $5,000 in Hong Kong. Although local wine experts suspect a lot of it is counterfeit. 12/5/09.

No CommentsLeave a Comment

Home » Tasting Notes » Of Two Cabs
No CommentsLeave a Comment
Last updated: Tuesday, November 25, 2008
Of Two Cabs

ExLibris
2006
13.5% alc.
Columbia Valley, WA

Château la Grolet
Tête de Cuvée
2002
13% alc.
Côtes de Bourg, Fr.

Americans looking for fine red wine often look to California’s cabernet sauvignon. After California, the largest producer of the grape is Washington State. This enormous viticultural region, with its continental climate, lies latitudinally slightly to the north of Bordeaux, which produces of course cabernet sauvignon par excellence. As a cabernet sauvignon drinker, I typically look to Bordeaux at any price. Because of cabernet sauvignon’s pedigree and popularity, so many wine regions of the world try to grow it. Polaner Selections created ExLibris from Cabernet Sauvignon grapes sourced mostly from the Champoux and Millbrandt vineyards in the Walla Walla Valley AVA with the ambition of producing a $30 to $40 bottle of cabernet sauvignon for under $20. According to Polaner, the wine is about 87 percent cabernet sauvignon, blended with some syrah and petite verdot, with a touch of cabernet franc and malbec for complexity. The wine is aged for 16 months in French oak.

The 2006 vintage had a dry, rounded, balanced palate with medium plus acidity and soft, supple tannins. There were upfront flavors of earth, leather, coffee, dried fig, black cherries. The length was short. The finish had a slight cherry note. The wine delivered quickly. It more or less struck me as engineered to be flavorful. In sum, eminently drinkable; also utterly forgettable. For the price of the wine, why leave Bordeaux?

For slightly less money, from the same shop where I bought ExLibris, I had a surprising gem of a red Bordeaux. The 2002 Château la Grolet, Tête de Cuvée, is from the right bank’s Côtes de Bourg, an appellation of mostly clay-limestone soil over limestone rock. The wine primarily is from merlot blended with a considerable amount of cabernet sauvignon. The wine comes from grapes collected by hand from selected old vines and aged in new oak. This age-worthy wine initially was tight after opening. But two hours later, I encountered a deliciously dry, medium bodied, supple wine redolent of coffee, vanilla, earth, fig, blackcurrants and dark cherries, underscored by a generous amount of minerality, long length and a chocolate finish. This wine had considerable concentration and a rich mouth feel. At $17, a steal. 11/25/08

Comments

There are no comments just yet

Leave a Comment

Add your picture!
Join Gravatar and upload your avatar. C'mon, it's free!
© copyright 2009 billyvivos, all rights reserved