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NAPA VALLEY 

THURS 6/1 CHEF LANDON DINNER

 

Opening the night with 4 corked/flawed bottles really makes a man appreciate the dinners and trips where you go 100 for 100. The unfortunate victims: 1996 Salon (didn’t think this was possible to be bad), 1988 Lafite, 1988 Cheval Blanc, 1999 Mugnier Bonnes Mares. Thankfully Chef Landon has yet to miss on a single dish in the half dozen+ nights cooking for us and tonight would be no different. Almost enough to make me forgive the corked bottles. 

 

1996 Krug – the “wine aristocrats” - as I took to calling them - at the table (Vinny, Angela, Doug, Lily) all preferred the ’96 Krug to the ’98 which is probably the correct answer since it’s 1) the more heralded Champagne vintage by a mile and 2) all the smart wine people agree; my ever so modest preference for the ’98 was a product of what was drinking better tonight, not what offers the most age-worthiness; mind you I’m still incredibly cranky about the 4 corked bottles so my judgment is likely impaired; coming back to the last glass/last sip, ok hand up, this is clearly the superior of the bottles of Krug; Lily would later explain why, introducing me to the concept of “sapidity” which means – and hopefully I can synthesize correctly – tasting something savory which balances the sweeter tasting fruit (higher in the 96 than 98); sapidity is a product of acidity, phenolic content, salinity, minerality, and certain wine making decisions (reduction, lees contact), but the principal takeaway is the way sapidity can play a role in these warm summers where the grapes possess lower levels of acidity at harvest

 

1998 Krug – with how much I love ’95 and ’97 Salon, I’ve been trying to make the case that some of these other mid-90s vintages might end up surpassing the 96s which has been at risk of coasting on its reputation; despite my best Lavar Ball impression at speaking this into existence, I cannot walk away from dinner maintaining this position; it’s surely more simple and great with food, but lacks the pronounced acidity of the 96; doubtlessly a delicious bottle of Champagne though 

 

Ulysee Collin Les Enfers – credit to Doug, our somm for the evening, for bringing a backup bottle of bubbles; that’s also how you know I’m paying way too much vig on all these purchases with Thatcher; tart, green apple, pleasant bottle of bubbles; UC always brings me back to Shuko where BQ first introduced me to it (as a side note, no restaurant in NYC has a more feast or famine champagne list than them)

 

1990 Meo Camuzet Clos de Vougeot – gorgeous bottle, lovely example of Clos de Vougeot from a warm vintage, made by the great man Henri Jayer himself; Jayer, as all you surely know, took a painstaking, perfectionist approach to winemaking – pruning and treating all vines by hand, sorting grapes first at harvest and again on arrival, destemming 100% of grapes (contrary to the trends of today), introducing cold pre-fermentation, fermenting wines with their own natural yeast, not filtering at bottling, patience with the fermentation; this shows up in a ripe fruit and juicy tannins that are noteworthy in a region that sometimes lack both (though not in 1990)

 

1998 Leroy Romanee St Vivant – I mean one sip and there can be no doubt this is WOTN and probably WOTT, even with a Screamer on the follow; so fresh, especially for a 98 Red Burgundy, slightly higher alcohol if you absolutely had to nitpick, but a truly perfect transition to Bordeaux/Napa cabs; my Aunt Laurie would email me the following week still dumbfounded at how such a unique and perfect wine can exist: “I now finally understand why you said all roads lead to Burgundy” she wrote; unfortunately for my June AMEX bill, all roads within Burgundy lead to DRC and Leroy; Vinny with one of those profound-sounding statements that I am never quite sure if I comprehend: “the Meo smelled like Burgundy while this Leroy smells like Pinot Noir”

 

1989 Palmer – last minute sub after the badly flawed 88 Lafite, I needed a sure thing for the sake of tranquility; the undefeated bottle, always mind-blowingly fresh and lively; other than Haut-Brion or LMHB, my 89 go to when I want to prove that in some top estates, the 89 exceeds the 90 

 

1988 Haut-Brion – full disclosure, I did flip this with the 89 in the blind flight (Ang and Vinny go 3 for 3) but have a HEALTHY dose of deniability with Doug’s completely FUBAR pouring scheme that he flipped a half dozen times; I’ll never understand why some somms all the sudden turn Arabic with right to left numbering, when it comes to a wine flight; I need Doug to rewatch the Jack Nicholson “in this country…” scene from The Departed; ever since I had the 88 Margaux a random night at NYV with Stoffers, I’ve been on a quest to study this vintage a bit more; I struggle to think of a great young analogue for it, maybe 1999 or 2004? the 88 HB is nice, but in no way memorable; there’s no way I flipped this with 89 Palmer, just no chance 

 

1988 Cheval Blanc – modestly corked, not a fair representation of the wine 

 

2002 Hundred Acre Kayli Morgan – served blind with the 03 Screaming Eagle and 04 Harlan; my gameplan going in was to look for the Screamer as the wine that would protrude while the Hundred Acre and Harlan would be similar in style (please don’t take me off your list, Francois, keep reading); but immediately, the HA KM punched you in the face; we all know the tired critiques of HA – it’s contrived, manipulated, engineered for 100 pt Parker scores, blah blah blah – but the wines from this era are well made and to those who disagree, I only ask you run the test yourself; oh, I almost forget, Vincent Morrow – Master Somm, winner of the 2022 Michelin Guide California somm of the year, noted Woodbridge detractor, etc etc – was sitting at the table with us and called this the 2003 Screaming Eagle blind…

 

2003 Screaming Eagle – absolutely delicious, but I did call this the 2004 Harlan (blind tasting is much easier on paper, folks); I’ve yet to have a bad bottle of any SE vintage, save for that one time in the back room of the Capital Grille when DAK added his own ‘aromatics’ towards the end of the evening, and this one stands alongside the others; an impressive effort for 2003 which is always an underrated Napa vintage in my eyes 

 

2004 Harlan – incredibly impressive performance: warm vintage, height of ‘Parkerization’ (I hate the term) and yet an unbelievably refined and balanced wine; clear wine of the flight; earlier in the day we did 96 Latour and 96 Harlan at the estate side by side (blind) and it wasn’t even a contest in favor of Latour; this 2004 Harlan had more of everything you look for from this property, concentration times complexity and layers

 

2005 Bryant Family – ran blind next to the 05 Colgin Estate and it was a tough showing, even for a Bryant apologist like myself; same hill, same vintage, same winemaker and not even a contest in favor of the Colgin

 

2005 Colgin IX Estate – just when I think I’m out on Colgin (at current market levels), they find a bottle to suck me back in; incredible aromatic intensity, lovely bouquet immediately upon pouring, tiny bit of VA maybe but still great balance and “tone” as the aristocrats are fond of saying vs the more “screechy” Bryant

 

1968 Mirassou Vineyards– a wine that only Vinny would be able to bring, with a super cool story and history that of course I’m struggling to recall; the peril of being the last bottle of the night served; says Cabernet Sauvignon on the label but in 1968 that doesn’t mean a whole lot; green tea the most prominent note 

 

 

FRIDAY 6/2 PRESS DINNER 

 

I’ve raved in this space plenty about the experience in the back room of Press with Vinny and the team in service, but it’s unfathomable how every single affair somehow manages to top the previous heights. Time dissolves back there; the ghosts and memories of pleasures past galvanizing the present. Without question, my deathbed meal would be one more night in the private room of Press with Vinny pulling the corks on some old Napa legends, warm pretzels (+ caviar) flowing from the kitchen at a steady clip every 30 minutes, perfectly medium rare steaks and the saltiest, crispiest fries this side of Mickey Ds (an enormous compliment) satisfying every ounce of hunger without distracting from the otherworldly wine being poured. 

 

2000 Krug – 20 years of age on this one is perfect, super fresh and reductive, really showing well; room was split on this vs 95 CdM 

 

1995 Krug Clos du Mesnil – ahhh this was the finish I was hoping for with the 96 Salon that we were deprived of last night; can already tell Ethan Gladner, future MS and newest addition to our Napa posse, will be a great note guy: “parmigiano-reggiano”; naturally a debate breaks out me + Ethan vs Lily + DK over whether it’s a bad bottle or not; Lily hurts her argument when she says 6 of her last 7 (humble brag) 95 CdMs have tasted exactly this way 

 

2017 Etienne Sauzet Montrachet – so pure, so clear, unique but also simple and linear; nothing extreme, nothing punching you in the face, the perfect balance that I seek in Montrachet and all of white Burgundy really; Françoise Peschon, winemaker for VHR, Heimark, Cornell, Accendo, etc) complimented my explanation of Montrachet vs Chevalier/Batard to my mom which was also a nice confidence boost

 

2017 Les Climats du Coeur Chassagne 1er – as always with a Vinny selection, the wine comes with a fascinating backstory, this one a Leflaive and Ramonet collaboration, only 1k bottles made, all mags, for charity; tough side-by-side with the Sauzet, bit hot, uncomfortable, high alcohol, didn’t quite click for me… maybe this is why wine – like all things – should be done in pursuit of profit rather than charity 

 

2019 Dureuil-Janthial Rully 1er – a Douggy blind, I called 2015 PYCM village, Jack and Angela both called Meursault; really impressive bottle, second best of the white burg flight by a mile

 

2003 Littorai Mays Canyon Chardonnay – just not my style, lots of residual sugar; Jackie Chard aka Jackie Littorai apologizing for it; borderline undrinkable; going back to it, I just do not like this style of wine one iota; extremely sweet Chardonnay; I know everyone loves Littorai in these parts, but there is nothing I can do to like this wine 

 

1985 Petrus – served blind with 85 Cheval and 86 Phelps Eisele; in a crew of people who love to argue about wine, this bottle stood out as the most controversial; once again groupthink to my right as Lily and Doug bomb the flight; DK’s whole speech about how the wine is flabby and lacks structure just completely misses the mark – the guy just doesn’t know wine; it’s an absolute beauty, complex, layered, super clean, super precise, lovely, potential WOTN

 

1985 Cheval Blanc – both Vinny and Ethan independently say has Pinot characteristics; put nose in and instantly know it’s BDX, but otherwise takes some time to connect with; did really grow to enjoy this wine as the night progressed

 

1986 Joseph Phelps Eisele – most important of all, Ethan and I go 3 for 3 on the blind flight; dirty, some Bret, old Napa all day, weakest of the flight by far

 

1986 Mouton – served blind next to 86 Margaux, 86 Dominus, 86 Heitz MV; after a dominant performance by France in the previous flight, here Napa asserted its pedigree; I think this bottle is reasonably flawed, not nearly the same performance we’ve seen from several of these at NYV – when right, it’s epic; I called Dominus blind

 

1986 Margaux – also fairly flawed, sad showing – I thought was too flabby to be a Margaux, lacked all the classic Margaux giveaways 

 

1986 Heitz Martha’s Vineyard – easiest of the flight to identify, also probably wine of the flight but more because of the bottle variation vicissitudes striking a blow to France here; dried cherry, but too dessert wine-esque, liquored, overripe to be a classic showing of Heitz MV; Ethan, quite simply, has a great palate – align 100% on this bottle  

 

1986 Dominus – super impressive to me, these 80s Domini have been a revelation never since our vertical at GT, hard to think of a class of wines I’ve done a harder 180 on in the last year; probably my second favorite of the flight to the Heitz, but the table trying to pan this one a bit too harshly for my liking

 

1974 Heitz Martha’s Vineyard – “this is in grave danger of becoming my #1 wine of all time.” – Jackie Chard; on my left, immediately upon first sip, Ethan says he needs a minute, this might be the best wine he’s ever tasted; the richness, the concentration, the fruit is absolutely preposterous for a 1974 Napa; one day I will blind someone smart with this wine and watch them call it a 2007 cab; every time you smell it, even though you know it’s the 74 Heitz and one of the all time greats, you continue to be shocked by how brooding and complex and purely pleasurable the nose is 

 

1974 Mayacamas – my Lord; just confirming what we learned last Napa trip with these two (plus the 74 Phelps Insignia), that 1974 Napa is right there in the conversation with greatest vintage in a single region of all time (61 Bordeaux, 90 red Burgundy, 02 white Burgundy, 79 Champagne others in the mix for my palate); same story as the 74 Heitz, just hard to fathom how fresh and vibrant it is; both of these 74 Napa bottles are more lively than the entire 1986 flight preceding it; I defy all the Burgundy snobs who have sworn off Napa cabernet to spend an evening at Press drinking 1970s Napa and walk away without a true affection for the wines made in this decade 

 

1975 Diamond Creek Volcanic Hill – very nice wine, just got caught in a road grader of a lineup next to the two 74 legends; but still impressive on a standalone basis, would never guess 30yrs of age between this and the 97 next to it; bit hollow on the palate over the course of the hour

 

1997 Diamond Creek Volcanic Hill – courtesy of Ethan and Anne, the fun thing was drinking this next to the 1974 Heitz MV – the gap in purity and concentration not at all what you’d expect; a ripe and modern so-called Parker vintage vs an absolute classic; tons of sweet fruit

 

1981 Stags Leap Wine Cellars – credit to Doug, he knew he was flirting with danger serving this to us given my thoughts on Stags broadly, but this was an impressive wine; lots of Asian spice, big fan; on the other hand…

 

1983 Chappellet – Doug, give up with this wine, please; it’s now 5 for 5 absolutely terrible showings for 83 Chappy; lots of people made terrible wine in California in 1983, it’s fine, it happens; but stop trying to salvage this guy; it’s an irredeemably garbage wine 

 

1979 Dunn Howell Mountain – Dunn’s first vintage, a unicorn bottle that is absolutely gorgeous; the best thing to ever happen to this wine was being put in the last old Napa flight rather than with the 74s; classic, classic Dunn, showing why we are such fans of Randy and why he is in the discussion for America’s greatest winemaker; acid and red fruit, not surprising from a wet vintage (though it had to help being on the hillside); probably the wine of the flight but I’ll amuse those who vote in favor of the 79 Opus 

 

1979 Opus One – also their first vintage, and WAY better than I anticipated; a super long finish, really distinct from any other bottle of Opus I’ve ever had; like the Dunn, it goes against the vintage, much more fresh and floral than green and vegetal 

 

Krug 170 Grand Cuvee – a far superior palate cleanser when drinking Cabernet than sparkling water


 

2019 DRC HORIZONTAL

MOWA, Atlanta Georgia - May 25, 2023

 

Anyone who spends much time ensconced within the wine world will encounter many trite phrases used with regularity: “wine is made in the vineyard” or “there are no great wines, only great bottles." You also will hear bizarrely specific tastings notes used when a simple one would suffice: is “Tasmanian sea salt” really an improvement over “salt”? Have you even ever tasted Tasmanian sea salt or did you just hear it one other time and loved the way it rolled off the tongue? 

 

And then there is a word that some clever person somewhere 100 years ago used to describe a wine that sounded intelligent and has been overused ever since: "ethereal." For the first 4 years of my wine drinking career, at every tasting - like clockwork - I had to suffer through someone describing some trash bottle of Italian wine as “ethereal” and watch as a bunch of non-thinking heads at the table nodded along, impressed by the sophisticated-sounding descriptor. If everything is ethereal then nothing is ethereal. 

 

Much like my vow to never utter the word “eucalyptus” when talking Heitz MV, I swore I’d never use “ethereal” to describe a bottle of wine. Then I tasted Domaine de la Romanee Conti. DRC is the wine for which the word ethereal was invented. It is also a wine that needs no introduction. 

 

The hallmark of DRC is balance between opposites. Equilibrium. Wines that are both masculine and feminine; bold and reserved; consistent and precise. It is the most perfect manifestation of Pinot Noir known to man. The oldest trick in the wine tasting game is to resort to analogies rather than actually having to speak directly about the wine. For many, it’s music. This bottle reminds me of Guns N Roses or Nat King Cole. For a handful of others, it always seems to be sexual positions. (insert your own example). For me, it always comes back to literature or great writers. 

 

What made Shakespeare’s plays the most compelling in history were the vivacity and accuracy of his characters. In one story, he could somehow capture with perfect precision the essence of totally opposite characters: the hero and the coward; the villain and the victim; the mother and the son. It’s only fitting that the greatest English writer of history should invoke the greatest wine in the world. Domaine de la Romanee Conti is Shakespeare in a bottle.

 

2006 Krug Clos du Mesnil (mag) – not a shabby warmup bottle courtesy of Steve; had the same bottle out of 750 earlier in the week at 4 Charles (humble brag); took forever to open up out of 750 on Monday, but here it was fresh and racing from the get-go; still needs 10 years to reach the apex probably, but it’s certainly on the right track 

 

2018 Montrachet – Steve poisons the jury pool before the wine is poured by mentioning that Aubert de Villaine, over one of their many meals together (another humble brag), rates the 2018 Montrachet as one of his favorites ever, next to the 1979 (Steve's favorite ever) and 1992; who am I to question the great man, but - premox debate aside - this lacks some of the character of the '19 in its infancy to me; linear and focused and soaring, but not the same weight as the '19 

 

2019 Montrachet –there was a decent amount of conversation about whether it was pre-moxed or not (partially because it was much darker than the 2018 next to it) – I know half the room is going home convinced it was slightly oxidized, but not me (though the only way to be sure is to open another one); most prominent note to me is the seafood salinity; fresh, lively, salted ‘land o lakes butter’ to borrow a note from Ashim; some tension between citrus fruit vs orchard fruit, definitely not the peach or pineapple you find in other white burgundies 

 

2019 Corton Charlemagne – second time having DRC’s inaugural Corton Charley (blend of 4 plots, leased from Bonneau du Martray), first since last December at the infamous Hard 8s Daniel dinner; here you get the ripe apple, lime, pineapple, some wood; impressively powerful yet fresh, but ultimately… it still tastes like a Corton Charlemagne; just not when I envision when I close my eyes and dream about the heights of white Burgundy

 

2019 Vosne-Romanee 1er Cru – second time having this wine, honestly wasn’t too familiar with the story; I guess it’s a second press from only certain years when there is enough left over fruit that is still high quality; drinks like a prototypical young Vosne-Romanee, but lacking the layers in youth of the more heralded DRC vineyards 

 

2019 Echezeaux – lots of green, herbs, olives, very abrupt finish; just not delivering much heft on the palate at all compared to the neighbors; some floral notes on the nose, but fighting tough company here; consensus worst wine of the night 

 

2019 Grands Echezeaux – a bit more sweetness, especially on the finish, than the Echezeaux; if I had to pick one wine from the flight as the one that perhaps was overcooked by the 2019 growing conditions it would be this one – both the tannins and alcohol are more pronounced than you’d like in your red Burgs 

 

2019 Corton – with all of the hype from Garrett as the wines were being poured about the Corton, I engaged with a new sense of excitement since it’s not a wine I’ve had many times (last one was while suffering through a vegan meal at EMP winter 2021); it had much more red fruit than the surrounding wines, cherry and raspberry, plus some wood/oak with a bit of char; it did offer more green notes than the others which is almost always going to cause a downgrade in my book 

 

2019 Romanee St. Vivant – the most controversial wine of the night; I find a beautiful, vivid, vital, floral nose with some raspberry and cherry framing; Garrett kicks off the debate: “what are you getting from this wine? I get nothing.” Structured wonderfully, but lacking the length and masculinity of the Richebourg sitting next to it; what distinguishes this wine isn't a certain perfume or note on the palate so much as pretty, silky texture and mouthfeel

 

2019 Richebourg – this wine I absolutely would have bombed in a blind flight simply because of the color – astounding how much lighter and transparent it is than the others, yet so sumptuous - a veritable force on both the nose and palate; Steve’s WOTN for very good reason, incredibly distinctive in all the right ways; before even sniffing the La Tache and RC to the right, this wine alone plus the Monties was worth the flight to Atlanta 

 

2019 La Tache – ohhhh now this is my kind of wine; dark and brooding, black fruit, tons of earth; quite possibly the best young red wine I’ve ever had; totally flawless in my eyes, it’s like all the charms of old Bordeaux combined with young Vosne-Romanee, just an incredibly complex web knitted together perfectly; “elegantly muscular” Steve calls it; I always rolled my eyes at the fact they make you taste in silence at that famous Corney & Barrow annual DRC tasting in London just after bottling, but this wine perfectly captures the spirit of the Publius Syrus quote: “I often regret that I have spoken; never that I have been silent.” – 50 BC 

 

2019 Romanee-Conti – the critique of the RC is that it can be austere or reserved in its youth, but not this bottle; all the glory of its aristocratic heritage leaping out of the glass, headlined by aromatic and complex black fruits; it possesses a density and robustness that makes you understand why some critics are projecting it to be the greatest DRC RC ever made; I hope to see this bottle again some day

 

2019 Coche-Dury Meursault Les Rougeots – I suspect Stevie wanted to serve this blind at the end, but after all the talk of “playing the player” during blind tastings, the entire room called out the wine as Coche before he even pulled from his bag; the 02 Coche Les Rougeots he brought to Press last month is in the pantheon of great white wines I’ve ever had; this 2019 has all the makings of following in the 02’s footsteps; orange peel note from Scott that I like; just an incredibly distinct, unique wine – nobody else makes Meursault like Coche; feels so gettable as a blind when you’re not tasting blind

 

 

After some deliberation, we decided to not serve the wines blind. This was a move I endorsed, but as the newcomer in a room full of heavy-hitters, I didn’t push too hard. Undoubtedly there are times where blind tasting is fun and necessary, but for this tasting I was opposed. My reasoning was manifold:

 

1) too often it’s merely the boldest or most powerful that asserts itself in a lineup of comparably-styled wines; with DRC, we are looking for finesse, elegance, nuance, complexity – these traits can easily be overlooked as we power down the assembly line in speed-dating fashion

 

2) no matter how hard we try to ignore the competitive aspect of blind tasting, it’s just not realistic for a table of 8 grown men; thus, we all would invariably resort to various party tricks to try and identify the wines blind rather than evaluating them systematically and wholistically

 

3) what Scott said was the argument I should lead with: wine, like other art forms, is most enjoyed when presented with context. I cannot imagine how much value would be lost if I read a Hemingway novel without knowing who the author was or when it was published, only to find out after I finished that it was Hemingway

 

4) blind tasting is a wonderful way to train your palate and enforce objectivity when tasting. I drink at least one bottle blind on a weekly basis and when at NY Vintners, we average probably 5 per session. Reps in the batting cage are crucial for growth, improvement, learning. A lineup consisting of 11 bottles of DRC including the RC and two Monties is not the batting cage.

 

All that said - in retrospect, perhaps we should have run a blind flight or two as many of our individual favorites could have been guessed by someone listening to the pre-game chatter. Jim and I boast a Bordeaux-palate so it’s not surprising we chose La Tache as our favorite with the RC and Richebourg rounding out the top 3. Garrett came in insisting that the Corton and Corton-Charlemagne were going to be the winners while the RC would disappoint; he walked out with the same opinion. The Ech and Grands Ech were universally panned. 

 

The most striking piece to me when reflecting on the tasting was how different all the wines were. Same producer, same vintage, incredibly close proximity, and yet wines that in some cases bear no resemblance to each other. This, I conclude, is a testament to great winemaking. The vineyards of Domaine de la Romanee Conti are given room to express themselves. That said, every man is entitled to have a favorite. My top 5 of the evening:

 

1) La Tache 2019

2) Romanee-Conti 2019

3) Montrachet 2019

4) Richebourg 2019

5) Montrachet 2018

 

We are all familiar with the critical acclaim afforded the ’19 Burgundy vintage and thus far, I’ve seen nothing to argue differently – certainly nothing from this flight. With greater than average sunlight and a late harvest by modern standards, it’s baffling that such a warm/dry vintage could produce such energetic and balanced wines in their youth; a truly unique combination of ripeness, purity, and acidity. Lord knows that in Burgundy – the land of scarcity – we could use a few more years like 2019.

 


 

2019 DRC HORIZONTAL

MOWA, Atlanta Georgia - May 25, 2023

 

Anyone who spends much time ensconced within the wine world will encounter many trite phrases used with regularity: “wine is made in the vineyard” or “there are no great wines, only great bottles." You also will hear bizarrely specific tastings notes used when a simple one would suffice: is “Tasmanian sea salt” really an improvement over “salt”? Have you even ever tasted Tasmanian sea salt or did you just hear it one other time and loved the way it rolled off the tongue? 

 

And then there is a word that some clever person somewhere 100 years ago used to describe a wine that sounded intelligent and has been overused ever since: "ethereal." For the first 4 years of my wine drinking career, at every tasting - like clockwork - I had to suffer through someone describing some trash bottle of Italian wine as “ethereal” and watch as a bunch of non-thinking heads at the table nodded along, impressed by the sophisticated-sounding descriptor. If everything is ethereal then nothing is ethereal. 

 

Much like my vow to never utter the word “eucalyptus” when talking Heitz MV, I swore I’d never use “ethereal” to describe a bottle of wine. Then I tasted Domaine de la Romanee Conti. DRC is the wine for which the word ethereal was invented. It is also a wine that needs no introduction. 

 

The hallmark of DRC is balance between opposites. Equilibrium. Wines that are both masculine and feminine; bold and reserved; consistent and precise. It is the most perfect manifestation of Pinot Noir known to man. The oldest trick in the wine tasting game is to resort to analogies rather than actually having to speak directly about the wine. For many, it’s music. This bottle reminds me of Guns N Roses or Nat King Cole. For a handful of others, it always seems to be sexual positions. (insert your own example). For me, it always comes back to literature or great writers. 

 

What made Shakespeare’s plays the most compelling in history were the vivacity and accuracy of his characters. In one story, he could somehow capture with perfect precision the essence of totally opposite characters: the hero and the coward; the villain and the victim; the mother and the son. It’s only fitting that the greatest English writer of history should invoke the greatest wine in the world. Domaine de la Romanee Conti is Shakespeare in a bottle.

 

2006 Krug Clos du Mesnil (mag) – not a shabby warmup bottle courtesy of Steve; had the same bottle out of 750 earlier in the week at 4 Charles (humble brag); took forever to open up out of 750 on Monday, but here it was fresh and racing from the get-go; still needs 10 years to reach the apex probably, but it’s certainly on the right track 

 

2018 Montrachet – Steve poisons the jury pool before the wine is poured by mentioning that Aubert de Villaine, over one of their many meals together (another humble brag), rates the 2018 Montrachet as one of his favorites ever, next to the 1979 (Steve's favorite ever) and 1992; who am I to question the great man, but - premox debate aside - this lacks some of the character of the '19 in its infancy to me; linear and focused and soaring, but not the same weight as the '19 

 

2019 Montrachet –there was a decent amount of conversation about whether it was pre-moxed or not (partially because it was much darker than the 2018 next to it) – I know half the room is going home convinced it was slightly oxidized, but not me (though the only way to be sure is to open another one); most prominent note to me is the seafood salinity; fresh, lively, salted ‘land o lakes butter’ to borrow a note from Ashim; some tension between citrus fruit vs orchard fruit, definitely not the peach or pineapple you find in other white burgundies 

 

2019 Corton Charlemagne – second time having DRC’s inaugural Corton Charley (blend of 4 plots, leased from Bonneau du Martray), first since last December at the infamous Hard 8s Daniel dinner; here you get the ripe apple, lime, pineapple, some wood; impressively powerful yet fresh, but ultimately… it still tastes like a Corton Charlemagne; just not when I envision when I close my eyes and dream about the heights of white Burgundy

 

2019 Vosne-Romanee 1er Cru – second time having this wine, honestly wasn’t too familiar with the story; I guess it’s a second press from only certain years when there is enough left over fruit that is still high quality; drinks like a prototypical young Vosne-Romanee, but lacking the layers in youth of the more heralded DRC vineyards 

 

2019 Echezeaux – lots of green, herbs, olives, very abrupt finish; just not delivering much heft on the palate at all compared to the neighbors; some floral notes on the nose, but fighting tough company here; consensus worst wine of the night 

 

2019 Grands Echezeaux – a bit more sweetness, especially on the finish, than the Echezeaux; if I had to pick one wine from the flight as the one that perhaps was overcooked by the 2019 growing conditions it would be this one – both the tannins and alcohol are more pronounced than you’d like in your red Burgs 

 

2019 Corton – with all of the hype from Garrett as the wines were being poured about the Corton, I engaged with a new sense of excitement since it’s not a wine I’ve had many times (last one was while suffering through a vegan meal at EMP winter 2021); it had much more red fruit than the surrounding wines, cherry and raspberry, plus some wood/oak with a bit of char; it did offer more green notes than the others which is almost always going to cause a downgrade in my book 

 

2019 Romanee St. Vivant – the most controversial wine of the night; I find a beautiful, vivid, vital, floral nose with some raspberry and cherry framing; Garrett kicks off the debate: “what are you getting from this wine? I get nothing.” Structured wonderfully, but lacking the length and masculinity of the Richebourg sitting next to it; what distinguishes this wine isn't a certain perfume or note on the palate so much as pretty, silky texture and mouthfeel

 

2019 Richebourg – this wine I absolutely would have bombed in a blind flight simply because of the color – astounding how much lighter and transparent it is than the others, yet so sumptuous - a veritable force on both the nose and palate; Steve’s WOTN for very good reason, incredibly distinctive in all the right ways; before even sniffing the La Tache and RC to the right, this wine alone plus the Monties was worth the flight to Atlanta 

 

2019 La Tache – ohhhh now this is my kind of wine; dark and brooding, black fruit, tons of earth; quite possibly the best young red wine I’ve ever had; totally flawless in my eyes, it’s like all the charms of old Bordeaux combined with young Vosne-Romanee, just an incredibly complex web knitted together perfectly; “elegantly muscular” Steve calls it; I always rolled my eyes at the fact they make you taste in silence at that famous Corney & Barrow annual DRC tasting in London just after bottling, but this wine perfectly captures the spirit of the Publius Syrus quote: “I often regret that I have spoken; never that I have been silent.” – 50 BC 

 

2019 Romanee-Conti – the critique of the RC is that it can be austere or reserved in its youth, but not this bottle; all the glory of its aristocratic heritage leaping out of the glass, headlined by aromatic and complex black fruits; it possesses a density and robustness that makes you understand why some critics are projecting it to be the greatest DRC RC ever made; I hope to see this bottle again some day

 

2019 Coche-Dury Meursault Les Rougeots – I suspect Stevie wanted to serve this blind at the end, but after all the talk of “playing the player” during blind tastings, the entire room called out the wine as Coche before he even pulled from his bag; the 02 Coche Les Rougeots he brought to Press last month is in the pantheon of great white wines I’ve ever had; this 2019 has all the makings of following in the 02’s footsteps; orange peel note from Scott that I like; just an incredibly distinct, unique wine – nobody else makes Meursault like Coche; feels so gettable as a blind when you’re not tasting blind

 

 

After some deliberation, we decided to not serve the wines blind. This was a move I endorsed, but as the newcomer in a room full of heavy-hitters, I didn’t push too hard. Undoubtedly there are times where blind tasting is fun and necessary, but for this tasting I was opposed. My reasoning was manifold:

 

1) too often it’s merely the boldest or most powerful that asserts itself in a lineup of comparably-styled wines; with DRC, we are looking for finesse, elegance, nuance, complexity – these traits can easily be overlooked as we power down the assembly line in speed-dating fashion

 

2) no matter how hard we try to ignore the competitive aspect of blind tasting, it’s just not realistic for a table of 8 grown men; thus, we all would invariably resort to various party tricks to try and identify the wines blind rather than evaluating them systematically and wholistically

 

3) what Scott said was the argument I should lead with: wine, like other art forms, is most enjoyed when presented with context. I cannot imagine how much value would be lost if I read a Hemingway novel without knowing who the author was or when it was published, only to find out after I finished that it was Hemingway

 

4) blind tasting is a wonderful way to train your palate and enforce objectivity when tasting. I drink at least one bottle blind on a weekly basis and when at NY Vintners, we average probably 5 per session. Reps in the batting cage are crucial for growth, improvement, learning. A lineup consisting of 11 bottles of DRC including the RC and two Monties is not the batting cage.

 

All that said - in retrospect, perhaps we should have run a blind flight or two as many of our individual favorites could have been guessed by someone listening to the pre-game chatter. Jim and I boast a Bordeaux-palate so it’s not surprising we chose La Tache as our favorite with the RC and Richebourg rounding out the top 3. Garrett came in insisting that the Corton and Corton-Charlemagne were going to be the winners while the RC would disappoint; he walked out with the same opinion. The Ech and Grands Ech were universally panned. 

 

The most striking piece to me when reflecting on the tasting was how different all the wines were. Same producer, same vintage, incredibly close proximity, and yet wines that in some cases bear no resemblance to each other. This, I conclude, is a testament to great winemaking. The vineyards of Domaine de la Romanee Conti are given room to express themselves. That said, every man is entitled to have a favorite. My top 5 of the evening:

 

1) La Tache 2019

2) Romanee-Conti 2019

3) Montrachet 2019

4) Richebourg 2019

5) Montrachet 2018

 

We are all familiar with the critical acclaim afforded the ’19 Burgundy vintage and thus far, I’ve seen nothing to argue differently – certainly nothing from this flight. With greater than average sunlight and a late harvest by modern standards, it’s baffling that such a warm/dry vintage could produce such energetic and balanced wines in their youth; a truly unique combination of ripeness, purity, and acidity. Lord knows that in Burgundy – the land of scarcity – we could use a few more years like 2019.

 


RAVENEAU VERTICAL – Jungsik, NYC 4/25/23

 

There is something to admire about those who decide to plant grapes in Chablis. It’s a place that has just about everything going against it – deep winter freezes, spring forest, summers that often fail to ripen the grapes, vines still dealing with the scars of the late-19th century phylloxera. Why would someone voluntarily enter into the business of confronting disaster nearly every year? Yet, a few brave souls do.

 

Of the 7 grand cru vineyards, Les Clos – situated between Blanchot and Valmur - stands alone. And when it comes to offering the very best of Chablis, two names tower above the field: Francois Raveneau and Rene Dauvissat. Their wines are distinctively rich in mineral and acid, long-lasting, firm, often austere, combining depth with intensity and elegance, grilled and toasty with none of the greenness I hate in wine; more understated than obvious, more reserved than ostentatious, generous without flashiness. 

 

This Raveneau vertical was hosted by the Acker team led by David Hamburger and Ebru Can in the private dining room of Jungsik. A word about Jungsik. This kitchen works magic, churning out perhaps some of the single best bites NYC has to offer. Truly mind-blowingly delicious texture, flavor, and layers in every dish. But Lord, does a man leave here hungry. Without a hint of exaggeration, I think I would need 3-4 of the full tasting menus to be properly full after a hard day’s labor in the salt mines of the interest rates market. Thankfully, Shane can be counted on to respond to a crisis at a moment’s notice and prepare a tray of piping hot cheesesteaks for our arrival at NY Vintners for the post-game session. 

 

Onto the wines, tasted mostly in flights of four from youngest to oldest in a pop and pour fashion: 

 

Montee de Tonnerre 2018 – warmer vintage, tougher one for WBs but if anyone can salvage, it’s Rav; still same acidity, young and one dimensional obviously, but a fine place to warm up

 

Montee de Tonnerre 2015 (mag) – another warmer vintage, more ripeness, “gun flint” a favorite note of Dave’s (I just go with “steel” but I am not a wine professional), smoke, minerality sewing things together nicely; has the classic oyster shell of MdT

 

Montee de Tonnerre 2013 – variable vintage that I’ve bene a hater of recently both in white and red; botrytis on the nose – my first but certainly not last encounter with this tonight, least characteristic of Chablis or Rav which is a huge knock against it to me; Dave and another guy Greg (who seems to know a lot about Chablis) trying to tell me it’s sexy; I disagree entirely, it’s waxy if anything, but this is not what I want when I crack a bottle of Rav

 

Les Clos 2010 – great Chablis vintage; already pretty perfect – might end up being the best wine of the flight when aged properly; finish goes on for days, incredible persistence; bit of spiciness; the table seems to be sleeping on this somehow, I am more convinced now it will be an epic wine in 10 years 

 

Les Clos 2008 – all-time Chablis vintage, this is my wine of the flight while Dave and the sycophants within earshot all fawning over the ’07; everyone knows my philosophy on wine – PLAY THE HITS or READ THE CLASSICS – is unpopular with the cool kids crowd whose philosophy is more: “find a way to intellectualize and crown inferior bottles.” A hallmark of greatness is a distinctive, even unmistakable, character and personality that is most present in this Domaine Francois Raveneau, Chablis Grand Cru Les Clos 2008

 

Les Clos 2007 – that said, Chablis doubtlessly has a better showing than Cote de Beaune; a remarkable bottle of wine that does offer high levels of everything you look for in Les Clos; hard not to think that if every bottle punches above its weight in this manner, we’re in for a legendary tasting; voluptuous, revealing, layers upon layers of complexity 

 

Les Clos 2005 – warm, remarkable acidity (though not quite to 07 levels), disjointed in a way that probably makes it evident that it was impossible to make classic Chablis in ’05; blind, I would’ve called this a Meursault every time; lacks the zip and depth of others in the flight; by the end, it’s come around slightly in a weird way 

 

Les Clos 2001 – the beginning of what I will call “the problematic flight.” They tried to warn me this was the botrytis vintage, but holy sh*t this is straight Yquem without the sweetness; makes me laugh at the quaint “botrytis nose” note of the MdT 2013; utterly insane that they are telling me this is characteristic and expected of 01 Les Clos; maybe blind I would’ve called this a Riseling? None of the candy notes 

 

Les Clos 2000 – warm vintage, I think bottle slightly oxidized – we were due for one in this era; toasty, crème brulee; little fatty, the wine has plateaued if not on the downslope; revealing the vintage 

 

Les Clos 1999 – more of a red vintage, but some 99 WBs are legendary (Coche); this one more Ramonet than Rav to me, but still probably the most classic and thus my favorite of the flight, though I will entertain an argument for the ‘97

 

Les Clos 1997 – very hot vintage like 2003, this wine is in very solid shape for a ’97 Chablis; licorice which you sometimes get in these warmer vintages, but not the shock to the system I was expecting; crazy freshness for such a hot vintage 25 years hence, punching weigh above its weight – Cote d’Or power to it 

 

Les Clos 1996 – GREAT first nose and taste; acid city, but lots of fruit to balance it out which is what I love about great Les Clos – freshness multiples by acidity; white, chalky, clay soil of Les Clos in all its glory

 

Here is where many ‘wine people’ throw their hands up in disbelief, but this 1996 is just about as old as I like to drink my Chablis – I don’t think this gets any better with more age and probably gets worse in a hurry. Coincidentally, this is right around the apex for vintage Champagne these days in my view - what I affectionately refer to as THE TRIO – 1995/96/97. Sure there are some single bottles of Champagne that are older and still stop me in my tracks (66 DP, a couple 79s, 82 Salon, 85 DP Oenotheque, 88 Krug, 89 CdM, 90 Tatty), but generally past 1996 we’re heading down a treacherous path where there be dragons.

 

Les Clos 1991 – I am shocked to learn this is not a botrytis vintage; full on plastics, motor oil, all the classic Riesling indicators; now some around the table agreeing with me, but apparently this is atypical of the vintage; Hamburger then makes a bold claim that the best 1991 red Burgs are better than the peak 1990 red Burgs; I wouldn’t really know, but if anyone has a 1991 Rousseau Chambertin, I’m ready to test this theory

 

Les Clos 1990 – this wine is SICK; again, I love when the best vintages on paper strut their stuff in the glass; yes, generally older than I want my Chablis but wow this is a benchmark bottle of Chablis, maybe the best I’ve ever had; shocking fresh – crushing its peers; I return again and again

 

Les Clos 1989 – difficult vintage for Chablis, better in Beaune; I see some value in this for the right price, but tough sledding next to the 1990

 

Les Clos 1988 – Francois’ last vintage and you can drink it with lots of cheese and that’s where my compliments for this bottle end; some debate if it’s off or not, could be just the vintage, we know Harris surely would call it corked while Shane would rush to defend it 

 

Les Clos 1986 – definition of a botrytis vintage; some people seem to like these? They are weird, these don’t do it for me at all – if you want to drink a Sauternes then order Yquem, you don’t want whatever this is; color is basically pitch black compared to others with an unpleasant sulfur that doesn’t really blow off; I would probably say TCA, others rushing to defend it – either way, this is not your granddaddy's crisp, refreshing Chablis

 

Les Clos 1985 – crazy good, “fresh as a daisy” as Dave likes to say, color is light, impressive, just an astounding good bottle for this age; well-preserved and enjoyable, but not quite to the heights of the 90 we just drank; yes, I’m aware of my rant during the 1996 Les Clos

 

Les Clos 1982 – solid vintage in Chablis, great for other white burgs, but now there is no hiding the age; in the context of old Chablis, I can appreciate the nose, but probably showing what it’s supposed to be, a fine way to conclude the tasting as I think any Ravs much older than this would just be experimenting for the sake of science rather than pleasure 

 

 

Wines of the Night:

1) Les Clos 1990

2) Les Clos 1996

3) Les Clos 2008

4) Les Clos 1985

5) Les Clos 2010


 

Fwd: 1945 Bordeaux- Dry January Celebration. Saturday 1/14 1:45pm

 

 

I feel a bit like Neil in that I don't have much to add in the way of thanking Michael and Allison for hosting such a memorable event that hasn't already been said. However, I do not take the opportunity for granted to drink such special bottles in the company of those who are generous not only with sharing these wines that basically don't exist anymore (believe me, I'm constantly looking) - but are also so generous in sharing their knowledge and experience. 

 

I learn more in one dinner with you than a dozen dinners with a bunch of guys in my age cohort where it's often Doug and I arguing back and forth for 3 hours with 8 spectators sitting around wondering why we give such a shit. For once, it's nice to sit back and use my two ears and one mouth in the proportion with which they were assigned to me. And, it must be said, it's refreshing to sit with a crew that can enjoy these wines without endlessly obsessing over price. Both ends of the spectrum annoy me equally: those who use the occasion to brag about how much money worth of wine we are drinking and those who spend the entire time harping on how wasteful it is to spend all this money on fermented grape juice when that money could be better spent on XYZ pet cause. 

 

Below are my notes from the dinner. Forgive me for the length. As Twain remarked: "I didn't have time to write you a short letter, so I wrote you a long one instead." 

 


1945 Bordeaux Horizontal/Dry January Celebration - Michael Katz UWS brownstone, 1/14/2023

It's a rare occasion where a home tasting is executed to the same caliber as one of NYC's finest restaurants, but MK pulled it off: private chef Paul Barron working the kitchen; Kristen Goceljak, wine director from Saga/Crown Shy handling the wine service; 200+ high quality Jancis Robinson tasting glasses numbered to correspond to the wines; 3 additional servers, printed menus, and, of course, a musical interlude or two to inject an element of class and sophistication to what surely would otherwise devolve into a Bacchanalian affair. 

General Musings, Impressions, Things I Would Like to Remember
- I appreciate Mr. Katz for sitting me at the head of the table (I have a wide stance, sue me) but Neil deGrasse Tyson was quick to let me know that it was actually the foot of the table and that I ought not to let it get to my head- Philippe confirmed what Brad Dixon, the head somm at Bern's, told me last month, that 1943 was indeed the vintage of the occupation (and 1943 Petrus the bottle of the occupation)- number one regret of the night was not having a fuller discussion with the table on updated views on the 1996 vintage for champagne generically - especially the big houses: have they peaked, have they not lived up to their initial promise? For my money, the best of these are still profound, fresh, clean, richly textured with firm acidity, and a seductive persistence from nose to finish but I welcome the debate. - NdGT story of his transition to from Napa to BDX to Burgundy: the 1981 French film Diva has a kitchen scene (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YhQbZkAlCjM) where the chef boasts "we the French are the envy of the world for this... the baguette...not too thin, not too thick" and so on. This scene represents the French art and talent for putting less of something and making it better vs. the American tendency towards "if some is good, more is better." Burgundy knows how to settle in the middle. - Coco Chanel: "before you leave the house, look in the mirror and take one thing off" - that's Burgundy, the tension between moderation vs balance- Philippe insistent that post-2015, the BDX investment to make (be it land or wine) is in St Estephe): generally underrated, the market has yet to catch up, climate change pushing ripeness up north, Montrose should be a first growth, Cos has made huge investments in recent years, Lafon-Rochet the sleeper of the region- NdGT speech that various forms of media today conspire to leave us with the impression that we live in particularly violent times, when the truth is we inhabit an extraordinarily peaceful moment in history. Consider that from 1939 to 1945, 1000 people were killed per hour; and while we live in better times than ever before, there is no guarantee we will never go back.

The 1945 Vintage
To Neil's point, it cannot be possible for us sitting here today to imagine the humiliation and brutality of a full-scale military defeat and occupation. And what especially sets France apart from every other nation in the world is the superiority of their wine; no other country comes close to ascending the same heights or offering the same breadth and diversity. French wine is the standard by which all others measure themselves. So to have this treasure mercilessly plundered during the occupation (unfortunately Goring, Goebbels, and Ribbentrop were genuine connoisseurs and knew what to take) only to emerge from the occupation with arguably the greatest vintage of the century a few months after V-E day testifies to the magic of wine - an art form that marries human craftsmanship with nature's metamorphoses in a way that is more living and breathing than any other. 
A few comments on the 1945 vintage broadly, an amalgam of what I have read over the years (Wine & War: the French, the Nazis, and the Battle for France's Greatest Treasure by Don and Petie Kladstrup was the first ever wine book I read) and learned at this dinner (Jim Finkel especially had some specific and illuminating insights). 
It has been said that 1945 was the "last vintage of the 19th century."  Not only due to the war, but also the Great Depression and horrible run of vintages in the 1930s left BDX with little advancement from their 1870 wine-making techniques. There was no concept of yield control, no idea what malolactic fermentation might be, rudimentary means of regulating fermentation temperature, only piecemeal replanting since the phylloxera epidemic, shortage (or absence) of treatments in the vineyard and sulfur in the winery, lack of craftsmanship traditionally passed from father to son as the women and children tended to the vineyard. And so we have it, by accident and necessity, nature was permitted to run its course and bless us with a 1945 vintage of essentially natural wines. 
The combination in 1945 of a cold winter (frost on May 2nd) and a drought to end the summer generated the lowest crop yields since 1915. August boasted a Napa-esque diurnal spread of 40+ degrees. As we all know, the greatest wines benefit from the range of temperatures to capture the range of notes we desire (in addition to the wine nerd stuff about cool nights slowing sugar development that gets jacked up during the heat spikes and preserving the acid that is driven down by the afternoon heat). These forces plus an early harvest (Sept 13, incidentally the same harvest date as the other vintage of the century, 1982) produced wines that were virtually impenetrable when they hit the market: exceptionally ripe and powerful owing to the low yields and growing conditions

The Wines as a Whole
We were lucky with about as good a hit rate as you could hope for with 1945s, something like 10 of 14 depending on how you grade a couple of them. I would imagine with no priming, most would have guessed blind that these were 1970s or 80s with how vibrant they were on the whole. However, knowing the reputation of the vintage, these showed to be far more elegant and pure than the dense and brooding character that I was expecting.
Six of the wines were divine and could easily qualify for WOTN:
Leoville Las CasesMargauxLafiteLa Mission Haut-BrionCheval BlancYquem
I've gone back and forth for 48 hours now and there is no ranking these. They are a class of their own. 
Then there were three very enjoyable wines, not just in a novelty/science project sort of way, but on their own metris: Latour, Petrus, La Conseillante. 
Not quite same level, but still worth the flight from Florida for this alone - Latour, Petrus, Conseillante. And then the Calon Segur - a perfectly acceptable bottle, but not one I wake up thinking about the next day. 

 


1996 Champagne Flight

2008 Krug - Doug and I decided to use the uber ride uptown to calibrate our palates with a bottle of bubbles with which we are intimately familiar; the 08 Krug is starting to come alive (years ahead of the 08 CdM) and can be enjoyed but is far from justifying the 2.5x price jump from release 18 months ago1996 Krug - also (still) not ready to drink (Neil has thoughts on this phrase), a persistent problem with these vintage Krugs; however the 96 Krug Clos du Mesnil is the Champagne of the vintage (96 LLC the red of the vintage) so nothing is impossible here1996 Salon - absolutely dominating, fun seeing all these wine experts effusively praising a bottle near and dear to our heart; wine experts asking us if what it's supposed to taste like; closest bottle to a sure thing in my collection, arguably the 95 and 97 Salon can soar to the same heights; classic classic coconut cream finish (Philippe a big fan of this note, wish he knew how many times I've used it before on 96 Salon), straight from the twinkie filling - nothing else in Champagne comes close outside of special bottles of CdM and Taitty; DAK and others getting mocha, coffee on the nose, not me; DAK: "let me show you why I'm king." Prime Candace Swanepoel on the catwalk; infinite potential1996 Taittinger 'Comtes de Champagne' (magnum) - pleasurable, but no hope of competing with Salon today1996 Cristal (magnum) - think something off with it; Cristal is the Jekyl and Hyde bubbles for me, constantly fluctuating between loving it and finding it worthless 


White Burgundy Flight
2014 Coche-Dury Meursault - classic Coche spice, just not my style, certainly not for the price and this bottle did nothing to change my mind2005 Lucien Le Moine Montrachet Grand Cru - lots of debate over whether it's premox or "just ox" as NdGT, others pointing out that even 05 DRC Monty seems oxidized, characteristic of the vintage; maybe a tiny bit tired, could use a touch more acidity; Philippe makes the point that his buddy Lucien is sort of the Selosse of Burgundy, taking you to the edge of pre-mox, "tits out" - a fueling station for those between classic WB and the classic Napa chards Kistler, PM, Aubert2013 Giradin Chevalier-Montrachet Grand Cru - apple, classic Chevy, little burnt rubber, one of the more enjoyable 13 white burgs I can recall

God Tier 1945s
1945 Leoville Las Cases - firing out of the gates; Kristen's early choice for WOTN (CB was #2); a total standout, the 45 Mouton of this lineup, everything in perfect harmony, not a single component out of place, a perfect wine; did nothing to dissuade my view that if we went vintage by vintage, chateau by chateau blind, LLC might rack up the most points of any BDX estate by the end of the enterprise; please let the 85, 90, and 96 LLC rolldown the curve to this 

1945 Cheval Blanc - 45 Cheval is not supposed to be a heavyweight, but for the second time this wine is preposterously good; stole the show at the NYV legends dinner last year (even next to the far more hyped '47 Cheval) and that was no one-off performance; clear contender for WOTN; vital, alive, open for business from the start, most inviting nose of the lot by a mile; one critique levied by NdGT was that it was almost TOO enticing, too obviously alluring, it delivers no mystery or makes him work to be satiated in the same way as the La Conseillante (which he originally mistook for the Petrus); eventually evolved on the palate to match the appeal of the nose; Peter comments it possesses the same lift you get from the great Burgundies (recalls the comment by Dave Hamburger that 1961 Palmer is the "best Musigny I ever drank" and Bob Cunningham at the same dinner that 1959 Beychevelle is the "best burgundy ever produced") 
1945 Lafite-Rothschild - pure electricity, a better showing in my eyes than the 45 Lafite at the Cellar Treasures dinner from last May; perfect intensity from all components; even for an 80 year old wine, this wine proudly asserts its pedigree: I am Lafite; the refined and delicate bouquet unfurling from the glass combined with its color, weight, depth, and long finish 

1945 Margaux - super fresh, absolutely perfect, possibly the best palate of the night; feel like the table skipped over this one fairly quickly, not nearly enough fawning for what the wine deserves; not Margaux-esque at all, never would've believed it came from this property; it's pretty, beautiful, and light on its feet yes, but also has density and emotion of a Paulliac; beautiful transition into the Burgundy flight; "fully succeeding in what it wants to be" - NdGT; did not come in with high hopes for this, but shocked; fresh, still has grip, nothing fragile about this at all, even creamy and velvety 
1945 La Mission Haut-Brion - a spectacular wine, cannot stop sniffing, never want it to end; "all cylinders firing" which naturally cues the electric vehicle jokes; usurped 1989 LMHB as the best I've tasted; affirms my view that in great vintages, LMHB is arguably the best producer in BDX, what kills them is how ghastly they show in poor vintages; the most "high-toned" wine of the night which Lily Freedman taught me supposedly means some combination of slightly drying fruit, rubber tire, VA, and old Italian wine
1945 d'Yquem - God, the heart skips a beat when I see a Yquem of this color heading my way; could go another 100 years, still has that coiled up energy, brash, can do no wrong; no doubt a benchmark bottle that bolsters Yquem's claim as the great wine in the world; the finish is just sick sick sick, effervescent, pulsating; wish I could compare to the 21, 28, 37 


Merely Exceptional 1945s
1945 Latour - a very pleasant surprise, outperformer vs expectations, reminiscent of the 1970 Latour at Daniel last month; still youthful, but old school BDX eucalyptus; much more vigorous than its reputation suggested, still some traces of tannin, acidity, sweetness, more deep and opaque than the others, same eucalyptus note as the Margaux; more undergrowth, leather than others

1945 La Conseillante - I brought this as a backup to my 45 Beychevelle and Haut-Brion and thank the Lord I did because this was the real deal; purity on the nose, some cocoa, totally refined and balanced; much more restrained than modern La Conseillantes (I've randomly accumulated a few cases of the 89 and drink every few months and they are pure Pomerol richness) and also more linear than round; improved with air
1945 Petrus - best sip of Petrus I've ever had (sample size of maybe 8); Philippe asserting that my issue with Petrus all these years was not giving them enough aeration - the little bb berries are so thick that the ratio of skin to pulp requires a lot more air than I'm used to, why it's always so brooding; NdGT thinks this is a cop out for people who paid way too much money for their Petrus; some black fruit surely, but more red fruit than others; this one most Burgundian to me, Philippe agrees, specifically Gevrey Chambertin; full of flavor and fruit but still elegant for such a big, tannic wine; no doubt improved with aeration, remarkable for an 80 year old wine

1945 Calon Segur - beautiful, tobacco leaves, ripe fruit, softer finish, nice but not otherworldly; I don't die for this wine like some others, it's pleasing and well-rounded, but a bit austere 


The Not Tonight 1945s

1945 Mouton-Rothschild - when I began reading everything I could get my hands on about old Bordeaux, there were 5 bottles that I hoped to try in my lifetime: 1865 Latour, 1928 Margaux, 1929 La Mission HB, 1945 Mouton, 1947 Cheval. Any time anyone invites me somewhere that offers the potential of one of these wines, my schedule is immediately cleared and I am there. However, on this night, my second ever encounter with 45 Mouton was a disappointment; baked on the nose pretty badly, some nice sweetness on the palate but this is not the incomparable wine that I remember from last January's Hedonism; that wine was tireless with outrageous beauty and opulence, unmistakable, unforgettable, endlessly fascinating bouquet and distinctive mouthfeel; while this rendition failed to deliver that same experience, it's still a privilege to be in the presence of the 1945 Mouton label which, while not the most aesthetically pleasing (that belongs to either the 1973 Picasso or 1993 Balthus available in non-US markets; 2000 Mouton label the most overrated), has to be the most symbolic and important 
1945 Haut-Brion - never quite got off the bus; sucks, I was excited to try what many consider the second best 45 next to Mouton with a reputation as a much more ethereal and elegant HB than others; hard to find as frost destroyed 80% of the harvest here and the property was converted to a hospital for French soldiers

1945 Leoville Poyferre - over the hill, not a bad bottle just one that has 1.9 feet in the grave; faded on the palate instantly, no fruit, only slightest hint of a nose remains1945 Beychevelle - dead on arrival, only bottle we didn't serve