RE: Tasting Notes To Note (Full Version)

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Serge Birbrair -> RE: Tasting Notes To Note (6/30/2008 7:02:56 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: cgrimes

How about just saying "point taken, cg" and leave it at that? 

How much do you think that dress cost, anyway?


This would be letting off the hook easy.
Now I have to explain your the difference between SMALL SUGGESTION I made and "ORDER HOW TO BEHAVE" you created out of it.

NEVER read more into something than it was intended

[img]http://www.nocomments.com/funnies/chicken.jpg[/img]




cgrimes -> RE: Tasting Notes To Note (6/30/2008 7:14:02 PM)

So now I'm "on the hook"--I see.  Well, I guess I'll just have to bend over and take it until you move on to the next victim--time to witness cg's public flaying ...[image]http://www.cellartracker.com/forum/image/s5.gif[/image]




Serge Birbrair -> RE: Tasting Notes To Note (6/30/2008 7:44:15 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: cgrimes

So now I'm "on the hook"--I see.  Well, I guess I'll just have to bend over and take it until you move on to the next victim--time to witness cg's public flaying ...[image]http://www.cellartracker.com/forum/image/s5.gif[/image]



cg, you poor victim,
don't bite your own and you'll do just fine

[image]http://www.nocomments.com/funnies/hurt.jpg[/image]

English Lesson #2:

Those are VICTIMS

Those are NOT.

Teaching English to an American College Graduate is in the top 25 of my life achievements. I'll cherish the experience for the rest of my life.





deb293 -> RE: Tasting Notes To Note (6/30/2008 8:10:43 PM)

This was not a thread for posting family photos...




cgrimes -> RE: Tasting Notes To Note (6/30/2008 8:23:28 PM)

I like you too, Serge [image]http://www.cellartracker.com/forum/image/s2.gif[/image]




Serge Birbrair -> RE: Tasting Notes To Note (6/30/2008 8:40:25 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: cgrimes

I like you too, Serge [image]http://www.cellartracker.com/forum/image/s2.gif[/image]


I know... :)

[img]http://www.freewebs.com/abstractannie/funpics/White%20Sox%20Man%20love.jpg[/img]




cgrimes -> RE: Tasting Notes To Note (6/30/2008 8:43:26 PM)

...I just wish you'd shave that goatee...




Serge Birbrair -> RE: Tasting Notes To Note (6/30/2008 8:46:18 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: deb293

This was not a thread for posting family photos...


All righty then...

Here is the picture of my "DeLong"

Feel better now!?
;)


Warning:
If you think that you or any member of your family might get shocked by this picture, don't open it.




Serge Birbrair -> RE: Tasting Notes To Note (6/30/2008 8:48:40 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: cgrimes

...I just wish you'd shave that goatee...


...and your patients wish you were carrying this instead of stetoscope
:)

[img]http://www.geekologie.com/2007/12/10/wine-necklace.jpg[/img]




cgrimes -> RE: Tasting Notes To Note (6/30/2008 8:59:28 PM)

Or this:
http://www.catavino.net/spain/spanish-doctors-prescription-more-meat-more-wine-more-fat-more-excitment/




Paul S -> RE: Tasting Notes To Note (6/30/2008 9:25:12 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: cgrimes

quote:

ORIGINAL: Colonel Lawrence

And to prove a point he's my 1st ever fav. author!
L.

PS it's really easy to find out who posted the notes.


He's one of my favs as well.  I just like to have fun[image]http://www.cellartracker.com/forum/image/s2.gif[/image]

Serge thanks for  the 3 min musical interlude.  I'm ready for a glass of wine now.

Craig


Thanks for the vote of confidence guys. Haha - I think a waxed rather too lyrical about that one - but it was an exciting wine! For the record, that is BY FAR the longest TN I have ever written. A bit OTT even if I say so myself.




cgrimes -> RE: Tasting Notes To Note (6/30/2008 9:31:08 PM)

It had the depth of an investigative report, the elegance of a sonnet, and the breadth of a Dostoevsky novel--a work of art indeed.[image]http://www.cellartracker.com/forum/image/s2.gif[/image]




Paul S -> RE: Tasting Notes To Note (6/30/2008 9:32:42 PM)

Haha, one does what one can in the face of a good wine. Hmm.... need more good wine....




Paul S -> RE: Tasting Notes To Note (6/30/2008 11:19:41 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Colonel Lawrence

Wow 29 TN's on my wines (more than me) and only two below 90 (at 89).
L.



You must drink some pretty good wines!! 




Colonel Lawrence -> RE: Tasting Notes To Note (7/1/2008 12:52:12 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: cgrimes

Or this:
http://www.catavino.net/spain/spanish-doctors-prescription-more-meat-more-wine-more-fat-more-excitment/


Is that the secret to their footballing and tennis prowess?
L.




Colonel Lawrence -> RE: Tasting Notes To Note (7/1/2008 12:55:37 AM)

Fairer to say I own a lot of good wines, which means you're quite likely to write a note on one of them (as long as you drink good Bordeaux from the past dozen or so years of course: you'll note my virtual silence when it's about Burgundy).
L.




Paul S -> RE: Tasting Notes To Note (7/1/2008 2:26:15 AM)

Anyway we can get you to start exploring the strange and wonderful world of Burgundy?




Colonel Lawrence -> RE: Tasting Notes To Note (7/1/2008 3:34:39 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Paul S

Anyway we can get you to start exploring the strange and wonderful world of Burgundy?


Yes, in fact you all already have: I read the Burgundy posts, even if I have little to contribute.
My underlying strategy it to buy appreciating wines which have a ready market and I know a number of Premier and Grand Cru Burgundies do fulfill that criteria.  I just need to learn enough to know what, and when, to buy.
I will persevere buying Chile and Australia (my current regions of study) while studying up on Burgundy (and then perhaps Califormia although I feel I'll need to buy Stateside for it to be economically viable).
Thanks for the uncouragement and previous comments.
L.




Paul S -> RE: Tasting Notes To Note (7/1/2008 7:22:43 AM)

Wonderful! Yet another one joins the fold.

I need to learn a bit about American wines myself. Spent quite a bit of time on Australia, visiting the vineyards there quite often as it is a bit nearer, and of course the old staples of Burgundy, Bordeaux and Rhone (mostly CdP), and a smattering of Italian wines and German Rieslings. Spain, Austria, US, South Africa and Latin America are big black holes for me. Only problem is that I think one has to be Stateside to really explore American wines.




Colonel Lawrence -> RE: Tasting Notes To Note (7/2/2008 5:42:27 AM)

An American icon?
 
Tasted by Keith Levenberg on 6/22/2008: So gloppy and oaky I spat it out in disgust, then somehow felt the alcohol attacking my nostrils from the back anyway. Just hideous! (559 views)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
2005 Sine Qua Non Syrah Atlantis Fe203~1a, b & c
 




Colonel Lawrence -> RE: Tasting Notes To Note (7/2/2008 5:44:17 AM)

Another American Icon on the same wine:

“I don’t know whether it’s catching on or not, but there is a school of nonsense going around that somehow low yields are overrated. Of course, farmers who treat their vineyards like industrial plants, and wineries who do not control vineyards, or have accountants running the bottom line, are the usual suspects making this specious argument. From my perspective, thirty years of experience have always suggested that vineyards with the lowest yields tend to produce the most interesting wines. Sine Qua Non has emerged as one of the world’s greatest wineries over the last decade, and low yields are part of the reason. Yields for their white wine varietals have gone from .91 tons per acre in 2003, to their most generous yield of 1.86 tons per acre in 2005. Their red varietal yields have increased from a scary, financially disastrous .32 tons per acre for the 2003 Grenache, to a whopping 2.11 tons per acre in 2005. In 2007, yields averaged 1.28 tons per acre for the white varietals, 1.31 tons per acre for Grenache, and 1.52 tons per acre for Syrah. (I did not taste the 2007 SQN wines, but other Central Coast 2007s I did taste suggest this will be a great vintage for this region.) When tasting wines such as Sine Qua Non, these statistics mean something because the Grenache is the finest in the New World, the Syrah begs to be compared with the greatest of France, California, and Australia, and the white wine blends assembled by Manfred Krankl are as sumptuous and complex as the world’s finest Chardonnays, even though there is little Chardonnay included in recent vintages, and there will be none in future releases. The ultimate “garage” winery, this operation’s back alley warehouse looks like a set scene from the movie Mad Max, but inside are the elixirs of dreams. Despite Krankl’s already lofty reputation, he continues to fine tune and build more nuances and complexity into his wines without sacrificing their intrinsic exuberance, purity, intensity, and individuality. I am increasingly convinced that no one in Australia, America, South America, or anywhere else in the New World makes a finer, more complex and compelling Grenache than Manfred Krankl. He is now producing two Grenache cuvees, an experimental, highly successful, long barrel-aged (40-43 months) effort, and a Grenache that is aged in oak for nearly two years prior to bottling.There are also two renditions of Syrah, a long-aged offering that is essentially an hommage to Marcel Guigal’s single vineyard Cote Roties (the SQN Syrahs are aged 42 months in 100% new French oak), and a Syrah that is bottled after 21-22 months in oak. These cuvees are rarely 100% Syrah as Krankl frequently adds in some co-fermented Viognier as well as Grenache... In a year filled with some extraordinary tastings (2005 Bordeaux, 2007 Southern Rhones to come), this tasting at the so-called “garage d’or” on the back streets of Ventura stands along side the wine-tasting/dinner at the Great Wall of China as one of the two wine-tasting events of the year.” (100 POINTS) – Robert Parker




Serge Birbrair -> RE: Tasting Notes To Note (7/2/2008 5:49:37 AM)

My palate is more aligned with Keith than Parker. Points, Parker are highly overrated and lemmings game, along with speculators/investors.  I bet you my left testacle that 90% of the wine drinkers in double blind tasting would agree with Keith.




Colonel Lawrence -> RE: Tasting Notes To Note (7/2/2008 5:49:43 AM)

And now the real question -
should I buy it?

It's not around a lot, and I've never seen it, let alone bought it, or tasted it.
Advice.
L.


PS  My extensive quoting of Levenberg and Parker is, I'm pretty sure, allowed in the interest of being able to critique them.
And there opinions could certainly have made the oxymoron thread - just don't know which one is moronic and which one on Oxy?




Colonel Lawrence -> RE: Tasting Notes To Note (7/2/2008 5:50:40 AM)

You got to the question before I asked it!
L.




Serge Birbrair -> RE: Tasting Notes To Note (7/2/2008 5:52:29 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Colonel Lawrence

And now the real question -
should I buy it?

It's not around a lot, and I've never seen it, let alone bought it, or tasted it.
Advice.
L.


PS  My extensive quoting of Levenberg and Parker is, I'm pretty sure, allowed in the interest of being able to critique them.
And there opinions could certainly have made the oxymoron thread - just don't know which one is moronic and which one on Oxy?


Yes, you are, according to
[img]http://www.copyright.gov/images/law_hdr.gif[/img]




Serge Birbrair -> RE: Tasting Notes To Note (7/2/2008 5:54:46 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Colonel Lawrence

You got to the question before I asked it!
L.


...just keep this in mind -
Parker carries very little weight as far as OZ and Spain are concerned. You might be forced to drink it (worst case scenario) or re-gift it.




Colonel Lawrence -> RE: Tasting Notes To Note (7/2/2008 6:00:33 AM)

Wouldn't suggest you bet on any 90:10 split, it's rare on anything (blindfold people and they wouldn't get red versus white 90% of the time).
And certainly don't want you talking in a highpitched voice!

L.


PS  For those who remember "The Stork Challenge" - 9/10 people can't tell the difference between Stork and Butter, the methodology was very interesting:
You're presented with ten crackers, or wafers of bread, each one with a different topping.
Some have Stork, some have Butter on them: you don't know how many of each.
Unless you get them all right - you can't tell Stork from Butter.
Lies, damn lies, and market research!




Colonel Lawrence -> RE: Tasting Notes To Note (7/2/2008 6:06:28 AM)

I'm pleading "fair dealing"
"a limited set of circumstances under which copyrighted material can be legally copied or adapted without the copyright holder's consent. Fair dealing uses are research and study; review and critique; news reportage and the giving of professional advice"
failing that I'm taking The Fifth.
L.




Colonel Lawrence -> RE: Tasting Notes To Note (7/2/2008 6:08:52 AM)

So you wouldn't pay $340 a bottle for it.

Would anyone (on CT)?

L.




Serge Birbrair -> RE: Tasting Notes To Note (7/2/2008 6:17:28 AM)

Janet Jackson might...
:)

http://vids.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=vids.individual&videoid=34715731




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