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WTN: Chablis, Burgundy, Trebbiano

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Dale Williams

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WTN: Chablis, Burgundy, Trebbiano

by Dale Williams » Wed Apr 04, 2007 9:20 am

Monday I opened a 375 of white as an apertif. I have generally liked the Gilbert Picq wines, but the 2005 Picq Chablis wasn't thrilling. Plenty of ripe fruit, but not a lot of minerality, and seemed a tad fat. Tasted on following night it seemed even rounder, without a bit of zip to give it more liveliness. B-

Dinner was a simple roast chicken from Keller's Bouchon cookbook, along with macaroni & cheese and brussels sprouts. I opened the 2005 Sylvain Pataille Bourgogne. You know how people are always buying the "wrong" Roumier, Dauvissat, or Lignier? This is first time I ever bought based on wrong first name- I realized after buying it I was thinking about Sylvain Cathiard. Never heard of this producer, might as well try. A little oak on the nose, but not vanillay- mostly the nose is a pretty rush of crushed raspberries. The palate is a little less exciting- nice enough ripe red plum and black cherry fruit, but without the exoticism of the nose. Still, a nice balanced Bourgogne with enough acidity to make it food friendly. A little sip on night 2 seems unevolved- will try again tonight. B/B+

Tuesday's dinner was an Italian recipe of prawns (well, jumbo shrimp) in a tomato/pancetta/whitebean sauce, with broccoli rabe. Needed a half-bottle of white for recipe, so I chose an inexpensive Italian, the 2005 Dario D'Angelo Trebbiano d' Abruzzo. We served with dinner, and I actually found it a pleasant surprise (my expectations for $6 Trebbiano are limited). Good crispness, light pear fruit, a hint of nuttiness. I hestitate to say that Italian whites (certainly a vast array) share any common characteristics, but it does seem I get that almond meets cashew nut aroma on the finish of IT whites ranging from Greco di Tufo and Fiano to Arneis. Anyway, there's nothing complex here- Pepe and Valentini have nothing to fear- but at $6 before mixed case discount quite a bargain. Unfortunately, looks like sold out. :( B



Grade disclaimer: I'm a very easy grader, basically A is an excellent wine, B a good wine, C mediocre. Anything below C means I wouldn't drink at a party where it was only choice. Furthermore, I offer no promises of objectivity, accuracy, and certainly not of consistency.
Last edited by Dale Williams on Wed Apr 04, 2007 11:45 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Florida Jim

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Re: WTN: Chablis, Burgundy, Trebbiano

by Florida Jim » Wed Apr 04, 2007 10:37 am

Dale Williams wrote:I hestitate to say that Italian whites (certainly a vast array) share any common characteristics, but it does seem I get that almond meets cashew nut aroma on the finish of IT whites ranging from Greco di Tufo and Fiano to Arneis.


Equally hesitant, I'd still say the same thing.
Best, Jim
Jim Cowan
Cowan Cellars
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Dale Williams

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Re: WTN: Chablis, Burgundy, Trebbiano

by Dale Williams » Thu Apr 05, 2007 1:46 am

So,for Wed dinner Betsy made brisket and matzoh ball soup (with
leftover mac'n'cheese and storebought geflite fish) for Dave's return
from Scotland. I was driving on a Midnight Run, and so only had a half
glass of wine- the leftover Bourgogne. On night 3 it had picked up
some earth and sandalwood notes, fruit still bright, oxidation
minimal. I'm now having another glass (technically day 4), nice Burg, long red fruit. I'll raise to B+

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