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WTNs: Pol Roger, 4 White Burgs, 7 Red Burgs, Climens

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Cam Wheeler

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WTNs: Pol Roger, 4 White Burgs, 7 Red Burgs, Climens

by Cam Wheeler » Thu May 17, 2007 12:15 am

1998 Pol Roger Champagne Brut
Vigorous bead. A really nice nose showing lemon, yeast, smoke and a lifted floral character. The palate is nicely balanced - smooth and creamy with delicate flavour and a lingering sweetness. Open and really enjoyable now, I don't think it is one to hold onto.
91/100


2002 Gérard Chavy & Fils Puligny-Montrachet 1er Cru Les Folatières
Corked
NR/100

2000 Bouchard Père et Fils Corton-Charlemagne
Corked ... two in a row :\
NR/100

2002 Bouchard Père et Fils Meursault 1er Cru Gouttes d'Or
A tight nose with fleeting aromas of peach, light caramel, florals and cashew. The palate is the highlight of this wine, with the oak, acid and fruit working together seamlessly to create something special. Subtle and light on its feet, finishing long and delicious.
94/100

2002 Bonneau du Martray Corton-Charlemagne
Matchsticks are the dominant character on the nose as well as sesame, melon, honey and sea spray. Very approachable on the palate, despite the obvious youth and potential to improve. There is a richness of flavour that nicely balances the woven acid structure. Very classy and impeccable length.
93/100


2001 Henri Germain Beaune 1er Cru Les Bressandes
Nose of dark cherry, smoke and a touch of spicy oak. Palate is very soft and straightforward. Finishes a little bit short and bitter. Nice enough to drink, but nothing really grabbed me about this wine.
86/100

2002 La Pousse d'Or Volnay 1er Cru Clos d'Audignac
An expressive, pure nose wafts out of the glass with musk, spice, candied florals and cherry. Palate lives up to the promise of the nose, with good flavour from restrained sweet fruit and balanced with soft tannins lending structure. Medium length and very hard to not enjoy greatly.
91/100

2000 J. Confuron-Cotetidot Nuits St. Georges 1er Cru
A very herbal and rustic nose that I have to say didn't really appeal to me with tomato leaf, basil, broccoli and tobacco. The palate is better than the nose and is loaded with white pepper and savory spice. The tannins are looking for attention, but are of good quality. Was looking a bit awkward overall.
87/100

1999 Domaine Bruno Clavelier Vosne-Romanée 1er Cru Les Beaux Monts
A bit of rubber/reductive character at the forefront of the nose, but if you could look past that, it was really lovely with rhubarb, raspberry, chocolate, iodine and a slate like note to it. Palate is really superbly structured with fine tannins and very good length. Could use another 5 years to develop at least.
90/100

1999 Domaine Bart Chambertin-Clos de Bèze Grand Cru
Deeply coloured. Powerful, brooding nose of violet, smoked meat and cherry. Palate also shows power and depth but it is well balanced with the delicate texture not overwhelmed. Tannins are very fine and don't get in the way of the line and great length of the wine at all. Totally delicious to drink, with plenty of room to improve and gain extra complexity.
92/100

1995 Faiveley Corton-Clos des Cortons Grand Cru
Even denser in colour. Nose shows anise, fennel and plenty of spicy oak. One person compared the puckering tannins to Barolo, another to sucking on a teabag - both were apt descriptions. Massive, chewy and dense. Cries out for food, but even the food struggled to tame this wine. Has potential if the tannins soften, but I have to wonder if they will. Check back in 5 years.
87/100

1999 Domaine Jean Grivot Clos de Vougeot Grand Cru
Very closed and reticent on the nose with some cherry and spices peeking through. The tannins were also at the forefront of the huge palate on this wine, but the underlying fruit seemed deeper and the structure as a whole better as well. Very good length. More approachable than the Faiveley, but still needs another 10 years to show its potential I think.
90/100


1988 Château Climens
Nose is light but lovely with honey, quince, spice and ginger. An elegant sweetness, with a long core of acid cleansing and elevating the palate. Good texture and complexity, long and focused. This is excellent now and should improve for the next 10 years and continue to drink very well for many years afterward.
93/100
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Saina

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Re: WTNs: Pol Roger, 4 White Burgs, 7 Red Burgs, Climens

by Saina » Thu May 17, 2007 1:36 pm

Thanks for the notes Cam! BdM CC is lovely and my impressions on the '02 are very similar to yours - if I may call sea spray minerality! ;) I understand that BdM have largely not suffered from POX? Is it really so? We might be getting the '96 here soon, so I'd love to hear recent experiences...

I haven't tasted as much Faiveley as I would like, but I understand it always is a very structured wine. I've been enjoying the Mercurey Croix Jacquelet 2002 quite a bit recently and even that - a "cheap" Burgundy at 16€ - shows best with a 4-5 hour decanting! It is perhaps a slightly austere house style on the basis of my very limited exposure, but it is a style that I like very much because it retains its Pinosity and seems to show the terroirs (if you beleive in such things) well also.

-O-
I don't drink wine because of religious reasons ... only for other reasons.
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Cam Wheeler

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Re: WTNs: Pol Roger, 4 White Burgs, 7 Red Burgs, Climens

by Cam Wheeler » Thu May 17, 2007 8:27 pm

Otto,

BdM is quickly becoming one of my favourite wines. I don't have any experience with the mid 90's vintages sorry (seen them at auction and avoided), but I did have a bottle of '99 blind recently that was terrible (will have to check my notes, but I think a little oxidisation was part of it).

Having a '99 Faiveley Chambertin Clos de Beze this weekend that I hope will wow me (although it is going to be served near a La Tache, so I'll have to try extra hard to be fair on it!).
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Dale Williams

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Re: WTNs: Pol Roger, 4 White Burgs, 7 Red Burgs, Climens

by Dale Williams » Thu May 17, 2007 9:49 pm

Thanks for notes. I just posted on the '02 Lafon G. d'Or, I tend to concentrate on reds in '02, but certainly are some lovely whites!
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Odd Rydland

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Re: WTNs: Pol Roger, 4 White Burgs, 7 Red Burgs, Climens

by Odd Rydland » Sat May 19, 2007 1:12 pm

Otto: Bonneau de Martray CC 96 have been reported (at last here in Norway) as thoroghly and consistently oxydized, so proceed with caution.
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Saina

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Re: WTNs: Pol Roger, 4 White Burgs, 7 Red Burgs, Climens

by Saina » Sat May 19, 2007 2:09 pm

Odd Rydland wrote:Otto: Bonneau de Martray CC 96 have been reported (at last here in Norway) as thoroghly and consistently oxydized, so proceed with caution.


Thanks Odd for the warning. I'll pass if it ever does arrive here.

-O-
I don't drink wine because of religious reasons ... only for other reasons.
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Re: WTNs: Pol Roger, 4 White Burgs, 7 Red Burgs, Climens

by Jenise » Sun May 20, 2007 3:20 pm

Mmm...I can just taste that Climens. My favorite Sauternes, there, constantly overshadowed by Y'Quem at least on this side of the pond, and undeservedly so. We had a '96 in China last August (found a 750 in the back of a hotel gift shop refrigerator in Shanghai, priced at just $50) that was absolutely stunning.
My wine shopping and I have never had a problem. Just a perpetual race between the bankruptcy court and Hell.--Rogov

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