Wednesday 11 August 2010

2008 Jean-Claude Boisset 'Les Ursulines' Bourgogne Rouge



Boisset Family Estates is the largest wine company in France, they have grown rapidly and done well but quality was often not a priority in this strategy (think Dan Ackroyd Estates and French Rabbit) and the name is invariably sneered at in Burgundy.  A little unhappy about being dissed in their backyard, the family decided to re-invest in the 'father' brand of Jean-Claude Boisset. They took some of the best vineyard parcels in their collection and added Gregory Patriat, a blond, young, energetic and modern winemaker with very traditional ideas on fermentation and bio-dynamism from Domaine Leroy.

I got a mixed case of 2008 recently and wanted to start slow so I picked the '08 Les Ursulines Bourgogne Rouge (Burgundy, France - $19).  My expectations were limited I have to say but on opening I was very pleasantly surprised.  The nose was light but very expressive, all red and black cherries with a little star anise-infused bacon fat.  The palate was high in acid (very 2008) and light in body at 12.5% alcohol.  But it flowed nicely and had some decent red fruit in there and worked much better with food.  All in all for $20 (!!) you won't do much better from the region.

Tuesday 10 August 2010

2009 RK Beechworth Chardonnay

Another in the Vintage Cellars line of 'Gun Winemakers do Chardy'.  This one the '09 RK Beechworth Chardonnay (Beechworth, VIC - $40) from Rick Kinzbrunner of Giaconda renown.  I was looking forward to this, my church mouse winemaker's salary making Giaconda purchases something of a rarity, what with children to feed etc..

The nose has that intense struck match, gunpowder flavoured yoghurt smeared over spiced, grilled pineapples character that you so often get in good white burgundy.  The palate is very full, but beautifully structured with acid cutting through from the start and reappearing to tidily wrap up the finish.  The flavours are almost inconsequential so much time is spent enjoying the structure but there is juicy citrus squeezed stone fruits in there.  The finish is long and fine with only a slight reduction in the intensity stopping this from being a truly great wine.

If this is an average day for Mr K then the asking price of Giaconda is looking to be very good value indeed.  Sorry kids.

Thursday 5 August 2010

Bowe Lees, yes please.

Alternative varieties.  The words generate about as much excitement in me as the phrase 'boutique winery'.  It is not that I don't like either of these things per se, both are of great interest to me.  It's just that they have become so heavily flogged as lazy 'point of difference' phrases that they instantly bring up the marketing yawn filter.

Which brings me to a wonderful wine I had recently from a boutique winery specialising in alternative varieties.   Fortunately the folk at Bowe Lees use none of these phrases.  In fact, they seem to be either a) painfully shy, b) hiding from the authorities or c) anti-marketing with nary a reference on Google, no 'interesting' back label, no website, no blog, not even a Twitter account - what is wrong with these people?  Not much at all, judging by the '08 Bowe Lees 'Xylem' Tannat (Adelaide Hills, SA - $30).  Fabulously glossy and dark in the glass this throws out great wafts of dark fruits and ripe leaf notes.  Yes, leaf - yes, good.  Very good.  The palate has the trademark solid tannin structure of the variety but all is ripe, layered and gently coated with fruit - think of an inverted Cherry Ripe.  Finish continues the excellent work and ensures this wine gets a definite 'sad when the bottle is empty' rating.

Tuesday 3 August 2010

2009 Ballewindi Chardonnay

I recently ordered in a mixed dozen from Vintage Cellars - which was a first - good discount, reasonably timely delivery and they send to PO boxes which is borderline essential.  The inspiration was an article on Chardonnay on the wonderful Drinkster blog of Philip White.  I was intrigued by the chance to get Kinzbrunner-created chardonnay at terrestial prices and also see what famous winemakers do in their spare time for corporate retail giants.

I'm pleased to say the '09 Ballewindi Chardonnay (Mornington Peninsula, VIC - $28) by Sandro Mosele was a very smart introduction to the range.  The nose was set up with ripe fruit in the peachy scale but with some slatey character there too.  The palate was very well put together, tight and just slightly unctuous but with a classically grown-up mealy dry finish.  Roll on Rick.

Wednesday 28 July 2010

Ah yes, small is beautiful

You know what?  The Riverland gets pretty cold in winter.  We have already burnt a tonne of perfectly good dead trees and are on our second load.  This time we got mallee which is a harder wood (I know, I tried and failed to get an axe through it) and so should burn longer and hotter than the previous tasmanian oak.  As you will see from the photos, it is beautifully ugly wood.  A pile of it resembles some horrific collection of bones.

  

The love of wine has been returning after a long vintage spent getting a bit sick of it.  The ones that turned it for me were a 2002 Ashton Hills Five Merlot blend (Adelaide Hills, SA - $35) and the 2008 Jasper Hill Georgia's Paddock Nebbiolo (Heathcote, VIC - $65).  The Ashton Hills was perfectly ready and perfectly ripe, a wonderfully balanced tight rope walk a mile away from green and mean and another mile from fat and hot.  I was very pleasantly surprised and it served as a timely reminder that wine should almost always be made in small volumes by someone who cares.  So should most things come to that, but reality bites.  The Jasper Hill took a more ethereal, high toned (VA?  Maybe. Who cares?), light and graceful turn, a wonderful compote of red fruits, florals and proper tannins, the sort you used to be able to buy by the pound at the local shop in the good old days.

By way of contrast, all our wines here at the winery have now finished malo, nearly all have been noisily centrifuged onto bags of oak chips of varying colours, shapes and effects.  Some of it is looking quite reasonable, the Petit Verdot for example.  Some of it; is not.

Tuesday 27 July 2010

Happy days in '07

I was pleasantly surprised to come home tonight and find a chicken casserole bubbling gently on the stove.  The open recipe book was of classic French dishes to serve with the wines of the Côtes du Rhône, the recipe was fricassée de poulet au beurre d'herbes.  The book and the aromas brought back happy memories of vintage 2007 in the beautiful little village of Chusclan.  Sunny days of pine needles, white stone and wild thyme under the bald eye of Mont Ventoux.  Smelly caravan, outside toilets and 100km/h mistral headwinds on a supermarket bicycle.  Ah, memories.



The only option was to crack something from that vintage and the '07 Chapoutier Belleruche (Côtes du Rhône, $25) came easily to hand and was only a step below a Côtes du Rhône Villages as recommended by the book.  A well crafted wine with inadequate fruit to carry it's significant alcohol (14.5%), decent ripe Grenache strawberries and caramel but a disappointing absence of garrigue.  A hot nose and a spiky, hollow departure.  The fricassée, however, was delicious.
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Monday 26 July 2010

Faltering indeed

Okay, bad me.  My quest for wine soul in the Riverland was a little half-hearted, as half-hearted as my blogging in fact.  I started out full of gusto and positivity but was then quickly side-tracked like a small child.  There are indeed some nice wines here, Omersown Petit Manseng was proof to me that this variety can do very well here, Mirabella Shiraz has the type of rich fruit and instant appeal of this region backed up with some decent structure and spice.  The Spook Hill Grenache was a pleasant surprise, hiding it's alcohol exceptionally well.  But that was as far as I got, vintage and more exotic fair caught my eye and beckoned me away.  I will re-focus though, as a believer in terroir it would seem counter-intuitive to ignore the product of the lands surrounding me.

Not that I have been doing that in any other category, an endless supply of beautiful peaches, nectarines, strawberries, oranges, mandarins, tangelos, lemons, pumpkins, courgettes and tomatoes has passed across our table having been plucked from as close as our backyard and as far away as down the road.  Add to this wonderfully fruity, green olive oil from Markaranka and local mettwurst, salami, dukkah and you have a pretty well stocked table.  Oh, and the rib eye, the wonderful, sweet rib eye - now I see what the fuss is about, good steak is as far from ordinary steak as great wine from plonk.  Only a decent sized freezer has prevented us from investing in a side of local saltbush lamb - damn you whitegoods phobia.