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And some wines to go w/ the chocolate:
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Santa Barbara Winery Late Harvest Santa Ynez Valley ZinEssence (Lafond
Vineyard; SaH: 41 Brix; RS: 22.5 Brix; 8.15%) 1987: Quite brown/murky/sherry
color; intense cranberry/raspberry/Zin very perfumed/grapey/raisened bit
earthy/volatile complex nose; very sweet/essence raisened/cranberry/ raspberry
complex flavor; very long/very sweet raisened/cranberry/raspberry/essence
complex finish; quite sweet & raisened/essence but still plenty of
Zin fruit remaining. $10.50/hlf
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Cossart, Gordon & Cia.Lda. Duo Centenary Celebration Bual Madeira (20.5%)
NV: Dark brown color; terrific/complex roasted/pencilly/charred/very pungent/espresso/coffee
incredibly fragrant nose; very acid bit hot/alcoholic intense roasted/Madeira/pencilly/burnt/licorice
very perfumed/toffee/ complex slightlt sweet flavor; very long/lingering
complex/toffee/Heath-bar/pencilly/coffee slightly sweet very acid finish;
incredible complexity, beautiful Madeira. $30.00
And the chocolates, a gift from Kevin&Peggy Hubbard:
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Valrhona ChocolatNoir de Domaine Chuao Plantation Chuao, Aragua/Venzuela
(65%) 2002:
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Valrhona ChocolatNoir de Domaine Ampamakia Plantation Millot, Madagascar
(64%) 2002:
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Valrhona ChocolatNoir de Domaine Gran Couva Plantation Gran Couva, Trinidad
2002:
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Valrhona Caraibe Carribean Islands (66%) NV:
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Valhrona Guanaja SouthAmerica (70%) NV:
And the usual mental detritus from the BloodyPulpit:
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Godello grape: This is an indigenous variety of the Bierzo that was nearly
extinct in the mid-'70's, but has been enjoying a rennasiance of late.
I reminded a bit of Albarino w/ it's floral/metallic character but also
had a strong green apple character and a bit more richness/ lushness than
Albarino.
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NovyCabs: I've followed Adam&Diana Lee's wines from the very start.
Needless to say, their wines have become huge favorites of my group and
we buy pretty much everything they offer up....except I've never tried
any of their Cab-based wines...a guy's gotta have SOME standards. Local
friend Bob Sherwood felt that should be remedied and gave me these two
btls to try. I liked these wines....a lot. Not for current drinking, but
for their very exotic character and my firm belief, maybe mistaken, that
they will evolve into something special. Sometimes you just gotta believe,
accept things on blind faith. And my belief in Adam & Diana's winemaking
skill is such that I gotta believe. But these were certainly "different"
than anything I've yet seen from Siduri/Novy yet. Not quite sure why Adam
& Diana made these wines, but therein must lie a tale!!
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AlderSprings Vineyard: I've not yet been able to track down the location
of this vnyd, but I gather it must be on AlderSprings Rd, somewhere up
North near the town of Laytonville, North of the primary UkiahVlly growing
area. They grow, in addition to these Cab-based varieties, PinotNoir and
Syrah, some of which go to Putz&Hall, and Pax Mahle. I'd love to kow
more about this vnyd. It strikes me as having a great deal of potential
and growing grapes that should help make Mendocino, once more, a force
to be reckoned with. These both reminded me a bit of the early Milano Cabs,
made by Greg Graziano and Jim Milone; which went on to develop into incredible
Cabs, some of the best I've ever had from Mendocino; in addition to Jed
Steele's Edmeades ones. And, not to forget, Casey's Eaglepoint Ranch ones.
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Mencia Grape: The red varietal that is responsible for the great Bierzos.
It is usually described as an indigenous variety to the area and "thought"
to be related to Bordeaux's CabernetFranc. One source I stumbled across
stated there are actually two varieties there that are labeled Mencia;
one that produces light/fragrant/perfumed reds (doesn't sound like CabFranc
to me) and another, thought to be actually CabFranc, that produces heavy/intense/tannic
reds and a variety that was introduced late in the 19'th century (which
WAS before my time!!). My guess, in absence of any definitive DNA data,
is the later take is truth. There was probably some indigenous red that
made these thin/lean/perfumed/wussy reds. And after phylloxera hit Bordeaux
and many of those folks moved South to phylloxera-free (at that time) Spain
and took along CabFranc & propogated it there. None of the 8-10 Bierzos
I've had have struck me as particularly "light & perfumed". They've
all resembled more, to me, CabFranc, than anything. Probably the folks
up there in Bierzo are not sure of the truth, either.
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Briggs PS: This is a producer whose Pinots I've had in the past and rather
liked. I was intrigued by this wine as being a good producer but coming
from LakeCnty grapes; a region that gets no respect, and probably rightfully
so. LakeCnty has always struck me as an area that could produce great wines
if they set their mind to it. One Mendocino grower has described to me
as, when he gets discouraged & down in the dumps at how things are
doing there in Mendocino; all he has to do is drive over to LakeCnty so
he can see how bad things really could be. Maybe someday we WILL Have some
great wines from LakeCnty. This PS is certainly a step in the right direction.
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Santa Barbara Winery ZinEssence: This has always been one of my favorite
ZinEssences produced in Calif. This one, IIRC, is their first Zin Essence.
Still have a few more remaining. The Zin grapes come from the LaFond Vineyard
way out on the western (cold) end of the Santa Rita Hills. Nobody, but
NOBODY, in their right mind would plant Zinfandel in this area. It's stupid...you
can't ripen Zinfandel out there. Somehow, SBWnry is not only able to do
it; but does it fairly frequently. I assume they just leave the grapes
out there on the vine, dessicating away, until they're like raisens. Yet
the wines, when young, have some red color to them. And this heaps of cranberry
syrup character to them. The brown/murky color of this '87 made me suspect
them to be dead & gone. Not so...they've held up remarkably well. Santa
Barbara Winery makes two wines (among others) that they don't get the respect
they deserve for; the regular Zin, the Zin Essence, and their botrytis
SauvignonBlanc. Worth tracking down.
No tasting notes in the chocolate. Some of the best chocolate I've ever
had. I was struck by the differences in the character between them all;
very terroir driven I guess. But my vocabulary is totally inadequate to
describe those differences other than "chocolaty". The M&Ms served
with them established the bottom line for chocolate.
TomHill
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