Showing posts with label Boyer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Boyer. Show all posts

Sunday, April 28, 2013

Tasting: Lobetia Tempranillo-Petit Verdot Roble

Lobetia Tempranillo-Petit Verdot Roble
La Mancha, Spain
2010
$15.95
Review Provided by The Vintage Cellar: Organic and naturally grown and made, this wine allows the varietal and the terrior to stant out cleanly. It shows a nice cherry colour with a violet shade. Red berries and cherries bouquet on the nose combined with spice and coffee. On the palate there are flavors of chocolate and cherries, it is fresh, sweet tannins and harmonious with a long finish. Pair with: beef sirloin with pepper sauce.
My Review: This blended wine has spent six months in oak. Once again, I tasted the darker fruits such as cherries that I seemed to taste with this brand of wine. It was soft at first in the front of the palate, but harsher once it reached the back portion of the palate. 

Tasting: Lobetia Tempranillo

Lobetia Tempranillo
La Mancha, Spain
2012
$9.95
Review Provided by The Vintage Cellar: Shows a nice cherry colour with a violet shade because of its youth. Red berries and cherries bouquet on the nose. On the palate it is fresh, slightly astringent and harmonious with long finish. Great with meats and appetizers.
My Review: I smelledark fruits when sniffing it: plums, cherries, the works. Between its light finish and relative ease on the palate, I can imagine this would go well with a juicy steak and red steak. 

Tasting: Lobetia Chardonnay

Lobetia Chardonnay
La Mancha, Spain
2011
$9.95
Review Provided by The Vintage Cellar: Clean bright coloured at sight, with greenish yellow tone. On the nose, exotic fruits like pineapple scents. Full flavoured, fresh, with good acidity in mouth, it recalls a tropical fruits bouquet. Great with every kind of fish.
My Review: A 100% Chardonnay wine, I learned this wine did not receive the oak treatment and instead sat in stainless steel. I have come to discover that I really like the flavors that oak brings to wine, so that always kind of disappoints me when it skips out on that treatment. It was very soft on the palate though, which is always refreshing to me. Sometimes, I don't really want that harsh bite that some wines have.

Saturday, April 27, 2013

Tasting: Lobetia Viognier

Liobetia Viogner
La Mancha, Spain
2011
$12.95
Review Provided by The Vintage Cellar: Shows a bright golden colour with lime reflections. Fruity citric aromas and magnolia or Tahiti flowers-like scent. Well balanced and good acidity, in the mouth it recalls the flowers perceived on the nose. Match with: Asian dishes, ginger and marinated fish.
My Review: This particular wine may be from Spain, but Viogner is a big grape in Virginia. However, I wasn't a huge fan of this wine. This wine was particularly flowery and herbal, both on the nose and on the tongue. 

Tasting: Lobetia Bubbles

Lobetia Bubbles
La Mancha, Spain
Non-Vintage
$9.95
Review Provided by The Vintage Cellar: Organic and naturally grown and made, this wine allows the varietal and the terroir to stand out cleanly. At sight, uniform beads of tiny bubbles reach the surface of the wine in a perfect and concentric crown. Clean bright coloured, with a greenish yellow tone. On the nose, exotic fruits like pineapple scents. On the palate, creamy bubble, full flavored, fresh, with good acidity, it recalls a tropical fruits bouquet. A perfect match: All kind of fish and seafood, cheese.
My Review: When smelling it, the aromas of pineapple struck me hard and remained with me after tasting it. It tasted very tropical, very fruity. I was also struck by the obvious flavors I was able to pick out in a sparkling wine. 

Sunday, April 14, 2013

Tasting: Cantine Rosa del Golfo

Cantine Rosa del Golfo
Alezio, Italy
2010
$14.95
Review Provided by the Vintage Cellar: Colour is ruby red with purple reflections. Bouquet generous, persistant bouquet recalling almond and hazelnut. Palate dry, soft and harmonious, and well-structured. Accompaniments red meat, game-birds, seasoned cheese.
My Review: This is another wine that I liked so much I decided to add it to my collection. The aromas on this wine are fantastic and very fitting to my nose palate: fall spices such as nutmeg and clove. It also doesn't have such a harsh ending as some wines do, but it instead softens at the end. This is also a very toasty wine.

Tasting: Stickybeat Chardonnay

Stickybeak Chardonnay
Russian River Valley, California
2010
$12.95
Review Provided by the Vintage Cellar: The nose shows intense characters of pear, spice and almonds. with underlying peach notes. The palate is long and powerful displaying dried pear, toasty, creamy, custard tart and nuances of cashew with lingering stone fruit and a fresh, clean acid finish.
My Review: Stan, the guy pouring wine at the Vintage Cellar on Saturday, gave us a good explanation of where the term "Stickybeak" comes from. Stickybeak may be located in California, but it is Australian-owned. "Stickybeak" is an Australian term for someone who is nosey or a busy-buddy. When you look at the label, you can see above the hole in the fence so that a nosey neighbor can see in to the next neighbor's yard to see what's going on. I could definitely tell this wine had spent some time in oak. Stan told me that it is mostly stored in old oak, but can be stored in new oak as well. I got that sense from the spicy, toasty, almond tastes dancing on my palate.

Tasting: Foris Pinot Gris

Foris Pinot Gris
Rogue Valley in Oregon
2011
$15.95
Review Provided by the Vintage Cellar: Although the 2011 vintage was difficult, Foris did particularly well with this light, spicy, fruit-laden Pinot Gris. True varietal flavors of pear and apple are perfectly set against vivid acidity.
My Review: I liked this wine so much that I actually came out with a bottle of it once I was done (I always seem to do that at the Vintage Cellar). The apple and pear tastes and aromas were very prominent in this tasting.

Tasting: Mokoroa Txakolina

Mokoroa Txakolina
Spain
2011
$13.95
Review provided by the Vintage Cellar: Young, fruity, dry white wine with high acidity and medium alcohol content (9.5%-11.5%). As a result of the fermentation process, this wine is slightly sparkling, producing a tingle on the palate and a full range of aromas. Two grape varietals, Hondarrabi Zuri, which makes up 95% percent of the vines, and Hondarrabi Beltza, which makes up the remaining 5%. Txakoli is excellent as an aperitif and is best when drank within one year of bottling. Mokoroa's Txakoli is a tremendous value for its quality.
My Review: I didn't really think a wine could be this fruity and this dry at the same time. It was kind of weird for me. I can't really say that I was a huge fan of this wine.

Monday, April 8, 2013

Tasting: Yalumba Museum Muscat

Yalumba Museum Muscat
Australia
Year Unlisted
$22.95
Review Provided by The Vintage Cellar: The non-vintage Museum Reserve Muscat boasts a medium deep amber hue as well as stunning aromas and huge flavors oozing with glycerin, sweetness, honeyed figs, jammy berries, and notions of tea, molasses, and prunes. This wine does not improve in the bottle, but it will last for many years.
My Review: It's amber hue reminds me of syrup, so much so that I half-expected it to be thick and oozy coming out of the bottle. Alas, it had a usual wine consistency. While it's consistency was that of a wine, it's aroma and taste reminded me of honey and syrup. I feel like I could pour this all over my waffles in the morning. Very delicious.

Sunday, April 7, 2013

Tasting: Villa da Filicaja Chianti Superiore

Villa da Filicaja Chianti Superiore
Chianti, Italy
2009
$12.95
Review provided by The Vintage Cellar: Chianti Superiore DOCG "Conte Andrea" is the best product of first-choice Sangiovese grapes from our best vineyards. It rests for twelve months in barrels of white oak (Quercus Alba), producing a very special high standard Chianti Superiore wine.
My Review: The aromas remind me of dark fruits such as cherries and especially plums. Upon tasting it, the plum flavor is what really popped out at me. I actually bought this wine after tasting it, since it goes best with my favorite kind of food: Italian! I'm really excited to try this wine with pasta or pizza.

Tasting: Arca Nova Alvarinho

Arca Nova Alvarinho
Portugal
2011
About $13
Review from Wine Spectator: A taut style, with graphite and mineral notes to the green peach and crunchy apple flavors. The crisp finish features hints of smoke.
My Review: The wine smelled of pears and apples and remained true to its aroma upon tasting. The tastes were fruity and floral, but most of the fruity tastes reminded me of a crisp, green apple. 

Tasting: Dom de la Louvetrie Muscadet

Dom de la Louvetrie Muscadet
Loire, France
2010
$15.95

Review provided by the Vintage Cellar: Jo Landron's Muscadet Sevre et Maine is from a beautiful walled vineyard sloping towards the Sevre, with clay, sand, and quartz stones over a bedrock of Orthogneiss. The vines average fourty to fifty years of age, the vineyard is certified organic and biodynamic and gives very low yields. Always one of my favorite Muscadets, the 2011 is superb with citrus, pear and herbal aromas with a bit of smoke and sea-salt. The palate is dense and very long with fabulous acidity. It will provide exhilarating early drinking and will be very interesting in twenty years as well.
My Review: A good start for my wine tasting experience this go-around. The herbal aromas mentioned in The Vintage Cellar's review were evident and the sea salt provided a unique touch to the wine.

Sunday, March 31, 2013

Tasting: Bogle Petite Sirah

Bogle Petite Sirah
California
year unlisted
$12.95

  • Review provided by The Vintage Cellar: Deeply inky, this wine coats the glass and lingers before the first sip has been taken. Heady aromas of boysenberries and blackberries headline the entry, while flavors of wild blueberries steal the show. Full-bodied and concentrated, seductive juniper and anise tangle with coffee and leather tones as the wine's finish lingers on stage. Enduring and enthralling, this wine is perfectly suited for an encore. 
  • My Review: All that being said about the wine lingering on the palate when you finish? Definitely true. I had to take a bite of bread provided by The Vintage Cellar to clear my palate for the next wine. This wine is quite dry. It is also very full-bodied, and has the unmistakable notes of berries in its smell and taste. Be sure to clear your palate of this one, because it will take it's dear sweet time getting off the taste of your tongue.

Tasting: Dom la Ricoune St. Gervais CDR

Dom la Ricoune St. Gervais CDR
GSM
Verone, France
year unlisted
$15.95

  • Review provided by The Vintage Cellar: Inky. Intense and complex nose, fruity, and spicy. Aromas of berries, garrigue, licorice, cinnamon, and cloves. The palate is intense and fresh. Red fruits. Seductive and lingering finish.
  • My Review: Very sensuous wine. I could definitely smell and taste the spicy notes of cinnamon and cloves. I really liked it. You could definitely tell that it has spent some time in an oak barrel with the spicy and smoky notes in it. I would recommend this for a date wine any day.

Tasting: Foris Gewurztraminer

Foris Gewurztraminer
Rogue Valley in Oregon
United States of America
2010
$14.95

  • Review provided by The Vintage Cellar: Nose of rose petal and lychee that Gewurztraminer is known for as well as stone fruits and lemongrass. The palate shows good concentration but stays fresh and lively due to its crisp acidity. We have always finished our Gewurztraminer drier than many of the more bottlings in the market.
  • My Review: This was another wine I liked and would like to keep in my home sometime soon. The playful and youthfulness of fruity offsets the more mature notes of floral to make for a really great wine for the developing palette


Tasting: D'Arenberg The Stump Jump Riesling/Marsanne

D'Arenberg The Stump Jump Riesling/Marsanne Sauvignon Blanc
South Australia
Australia
2011
$13.95

  • Review provided by The Vintage Cellar: An intoxicating mix of ripe yellow peaches, guava, and hints of honey blossoms on the nose. The tropical stone fruits are also evident on the palate but give up a little territory to some lovely, zesty lemon, lime citrus characters which really add to the freshness of this wine.
  • My Review: I didn't really taste this wine as being anything particularly special. It wasn't bad, don't get me wrong, but it didn't pop out at me as something I absolutely had to have. I could definitely taste and smell the honey blossoms as I swirled it for the aroma and tasted it on my tongue. Overall, I wouldn't mind having this wine in my home and drinking it, but it is probably not something I would go out on my own and purchase.