wrote:

94 Points

Sunday, November 13, 2022 - Decanted for four hours before service - eight might have been better. Significant sediment filtered during the decant. In the glass, auburn-tinted pink at the rim, shading to dark, clear raspberry-maroon at the core. On the nose, raspberries, briny olives, and high-toned cedar. On the palate, beef blood, olive tapenade, mint, and kirsch weaving in and out of the spotlight, with a loose, open attack that quickly becomes structured and firm, relenting only slightly on the long, complex finish. Not a tannic monster by any means, and the raw materials are there, but this clearly needs more time.

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  • Comment posted by Palisades57:

    1/29/2023 7:43:00 AM - Nice note. What do you use to filter old wines? Just a standard mesh strainer? Lots of the finer sediment remains with those, I have found?

  • Comment posted by jshufelt:

    1/29/2023 1:05:00 PM - I've been using this:

    https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000YDGMNW/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_search_asin_title?ie=UTF8&th=1

    On the positive side, this seems to catch just about everything - on the negative side, with sediment-heavy wines, it can clog up and require cleaning midway through a decant.

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