2005 Meerlust 'Rubicon', South Africa: This once-icon of the South African Bordeaux blends is showing very well right now though it's very different from the '99, which is the prior vintage I owned. This would seem to be a riper vintage with stronger sweeter huckleberry blue-black mid-palate fruit. Additionally, heavy dust on the nose and palate along with tobacco, cedar and sweet basil notes. It probably hasn't peaked yet, but I don't believe it has the structure for long-term aging.
2009 Reynvaan 'The Unnamed' and 'The Contender', Washington: A guest brought both wines over on Saturday night. The Unnamed had been opened and sampled before he got here--I'm not sure for how long, and therefore I'm not sure how much difference it made in what I tasted. But wow, these wines are great. My concerns about the higher alcohols in the 09's vs. the 08's were not validated in what I tasted, the alcohol was not apparent. Instead, what we got was more proof that Reynvaan is the new kid on the Washington Syrah block that everybody's going to have to contend with: very old-world traditional in an Ogier version of Northern Rhone kind of way. These wines will not be as ageable, but they're tarry and sophisticated and at just three years old are already displaying some of those 'ass-in-a-glass' characteristics that are have been nearly impossible for new world syrahs to capture. Move over, Cayuse.

