I went to another wine tasting last weekend. It was a 3 hours class, the actual tasting and finally poetry, music and more wine! :p
I’ll set this goal as done. The new actions for me will be buying different brands and vintages to choose my favorite, and of course enjoy wine!
Dec 03, 2008, 02:37PM PST | 1 cheer | 0 comments
- complete a wine-tasting course
- understand different varieties of wine
- be able to recognize different wine regions
- still be able to enjoy cheap wine!
Sep 05, 2008, 03:37PM PDT | 0 comments
I was invited to a Spanish’s wines testing yesterday and it was great. The oenologist first talked about the wine history in the world and Spanish wines. We tested four kinds of wine, all of different ages, while he explained their characteristics and how we should measure them. My friends gave me tips too.
We stood in he place after it finished and continued drinking and chatting, great night!!
Jun 27, 2008, 12:00PM PDT | 1 cheer | 0 comments
With the last name Simard, I should know what’s up.
Jun 15, 2008, 08:51PM PDT | 0 comments
I’ve never really been into wine until a few months ago when my boss took us on a wine tour to the Finger Lakes (NY). Since then I have really been interested in wine but I don’t know much about it at all. I feel so lucky to live so close to a great wine region and I hope to take advantage of this more as soon as the weather starts getting nicer.
Mar 25, 2008, 07:32PM PDT | 1 cheer | 0 comments
Dave is back to business
A spectacular dinner on business at Troquet in Boston. Two unbelievable wines served with one of the best dinners I have ever had. Scott is a genius with food.
Although I’ve had a few Montrachets in my time, the Leflaive Chevalier Montrachet has consistently made a bigger impression on me than any other white burgundy. It deserves the rave reviews it gets on the wine rags.
Golden yellow color, delightful nose. Complicated in the extreme, the nose continually changed and evolved, rolling through its flavors over time. Pear and Lemon were dominant for a while, giving way to minerals and oysters, fading to toasted oak and butter, fading to butterscotch, which drifted back to lemon, and then pears again. Unbelievable to smell.
On the palate, this wine is also remarkable. Sure, it doesn’t have the thick mouth-feel of a Montrachet, but it has all the complexity with rich minerals, fruits like citrus, lemon and orange, and beautiful butterscotch, but also a dry, dusty flavor of limestone that truly sets the Chevalier Montrachet apart from its sister vineyards. The finish was, literally, longer than a full minute, rolling through the flavors as the time passed.
the wine was able to stand up to Foie Gras, Scallops, Oysters, Caviar, wasabe and even madeira sauce. It couldn’t beat onions, though.
I consider this wine among the best I have ever consumed. 10/10 overall, 10/10 for its price. Yes, it’s expensive. But this is what all good Chardonnay aspires to taste like.
Feb 20, 2008, 06:44PM PST | 0 comments
Dave is back to business
Saturday night we dined with some friends who are quite experienced in Italian wines. We drank a few bottles of very respectable wines, but the two big buys we had with dinner were:
1995 Riserva Brunello di Montalcino- Vasco Sassetti
This was an elegant, reserved, and well rounded wine, drinking perfectly. Rasberry and strawberry on the nose, giving way to heavier fruit on the palate. Very long, graceful finish. The oak was perfectly blended with the fruit, making it a quaffable, great wine. Rating 9/10 overall, and 8/10 in its price range.
1997 Tenuta Secolo Barolo, Cerequio vineyard – Guiseppe Contrato
A fine, fully developed Nebbiolo in its prime. I was worried the wine would be tight and backwards, but a couple hours after decanting, this wine was fully opened and wonderful. Jammy and mouthfilling on the palate, with heavy plum and tar balanced with oak. Rating 9/10 overall, 9/10 in its price range.
Feb 04, 2008, 05:56AM PST | 2 cheers | 3 comments
I love Mascatos and I almost refuse to drink anything else. Red wines are hard for me to drink! I like to be able to really understand all wines and not be so bigoted!
Jan 13, 2008, 09:21PM PST | 0 comments
Dave is back to business
Bordeaux, France, $45. on release
Tasted 12/24/07, with dinner (prime rib)
This is an outstanding bottle of wine, drinking perfectly now, but with the potential to go another 20 years.
We decanted the wine well before dinner, so it had time to open up, and I’m glad we did. It’s a huge wine, with great power and completxity. The nose is a lovely cassis and cedar, with a bit of iodine which faded over time.
It is mouthfilling and jammy on the palate, with dark cherry and cassis fruits, fading to a lovely finish of cedar, tobacco and a hint of vanilla. Classic Lynch-Bages, this vintage will go down in the books as one of the best examples of the style and wine.
Tons of fruit, balanced nicely with soft tannins. This wine is at its peak right now. It will continue to drink well for another 20 years, but I recommend going for it now.
I rate this wine 10/10 overall, and 9/10 for its price range.
Dec 25, 2007, 07:28AM PST | 0 comments
Dave is back to business
Single Vineyard bottling: Te Muna Road Vineyard, Marlborough, New Zealand. $20.
Tasted 12/24/07, before dinner.
This wine is excellent to outstanding. Truly the first “sure thing” wine recommendation I’ve found.
Beautiful lemony Sauv. Blanc nose, with slight toast and nuttiness. Clean, though, with only a hint of oak. Fresh, forward fruit on the attack, with lemon fading to a grassy Mandarin orange, then back to lemon/lime tart and passion fruit on the finish. Big, acidic flavors, but fading to balanced fruit on the finish. Long, herbal, fruity, balanced, a wonderful drink. I wish I owned more.
In the interests of indexing my wines, this one gets an 8/10 overall, and a 10/10 for its price range.
Dec 24, 2007, 02:31PM PST | 1 cheer | 3 comments