El Casot, La Colección, Trio Infernal, Combier, Fischer and Gerin, Torroja, Priorat DOQ, Spain, 2012, 13.5% abv.

This version of the Priorat comes from the celler of three French winemakers who torroja del prioratmigrated to Catalunya and set up shop in the tiny hamlet of Torroja del Priorat.  They’ve been making wines together here since 2002.

You can read about another of their wines – Riu – here, but this one was given to me by a UK wine buyer who was at Hotel-Hostal Sport in Falset when we ate dinner there.Trio Infernal

As he was leaving, Dave Canadas dropped by our table and bequeathed me three nearly fully bottles of red Priorat he’d been tasting.  The wine geek in me had to do a blind tasting on each back at our hotel.

This bottle was the best of the bunch; buy it if you can find it in your market.

A medium ruby version of 100% Garnaxa grown on south facing brown llicorella soils, the El Casot is youthful and has intense aromas of sweet black cherry, fresh tarragon, rosemary and sage with minerals.

The dry palate has medium plus acidity and medium alcohol, which is a pleasant surprise in a Priorat red.  The tannins are ripe and have grip but are not as face-ripping as can be found in other bottles.  Flavours are clean and delineated – medium plus black cherry and black plum with currant, star anise and both fresh and dried herbs complimented by long finish.

Well balanced in terms of tannins and fruit.  A lovely example of 100% Garnaxa; WSET Very Good.

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Viatge al Priorat, Celler Joan Simó, Porrera, Priorat DOQ, Spain, 14.5% abv, 15 Euros

ViatgeThis youthful version of the Priorat comes from the Porrera celler of Joan Simó, but was given to me by a UK wine buyer who was at Hotel-Hostal Sport in Falset when we ate dinner there.

As he was leaving, Dave Canadas dropped by our table and bequeathed me three nearly fully bottles of red Priorat he’d been tasting.  The wine geek in me had to do a blind tasting on each back at our hotel.

The ‘Journey to Priorat‘ is made from 60% Garnaxa, 20% Cabernet, 15% Syrah and 5% Merlot.  It has a medium plus shade of ruby red with purple pomegranate tinges and is youthful with medium plus aromas of Byng cherry and deep, black currant, crushed thyme, sage, tarragon and minerals.joan simo porrera celler

The palate is dry with medium plus acidity, full on, grippy tannins and alcohol that while it is not noticeably high, is actually right up there.  The medium plus flavours include soy sauce, soft star anise, more dried herbs, black currant and blackberry with green olive.  The cedar-laced finish is better than average.Viatge

I found this wine to be well balanced and drinking well, but it has an ageing window of 5-7 more years.  WSET Good.

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The Macallan, Select Oak, Highland Single Malt Scotch Whisky,  Speyside, Scotland, 40% abv. C$80

macallenAlso known as the Mac’Allen’ if you’re drinking it with said friend who was kind enough to share, this Scotch was aged in American oak and first fill European oak sherry casks.

It has a pale amber hue and on the nose it shows medium plus intense high notes of honey, pink cotton candy, vanilla, medicinal herbs, wood and whiff of smoke.

The palate is dry and has warming alcohol with medium intense flavours of vanilla, clove, ginger, more liniment and butterscotch.  With a dash of water, some stone fruit emerges to linger with the finish.

This single malt whisky WSET Very Good.  Enjoy as we did.

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Macduff, Single Old Particular, Single Malt Scotch Whisky, 21 years old, Highland, Scotland, 41.9% abv.

macduffThis is from a distillery located in Speyside that was founded in 1948 and is currently owned by Bacardi but managed by John Dewar & Sons.

The Macduff 21 year old (‘glorious years’, according to the distillery) is a single cask whisky and this is one of only 252 bottles from the cask. There is even a reference number for the cask on the bottle – #DL9905.  The distillation and bottling dates are also available – April 1992 and August 2013.

There is no chill filtration used and no caramel colouring to create its pale amber tone.  The nose on the Macduff 21 carries orange oil, honey, dried apricot, freshly sawn wood and the right amount of smokey peat to make it interesting.

The palate is lightly medicinal showing liniment and more dried fruit, honey comb and toast.  Warming and smooth with a light kick and tasty finish.  Don’t say I didn’t warn you!

WSET Very Good spirit.  Well played, Andy – well played.

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Syrah, Chateau Ste. Michelle, Columbia Valley, Washington, 2011, 13.5% abv, US$19

Chat ste MichelleThis Washington state Syrah punches far above its weight in terms of quality for money.

It’s a bright, deep garnet with a ruby rim and thick legs.  On the nose it has pronounced intensity with aromas of deeply ripe blackberry, Damson plum, red currant, spice box, leather, barnyard and fresh earth.

The palate is dry with medium plus acidity, average alcohol and ripe, dusty tannins.  The medium body hangs on its pronounced flavours of deeply ripe black plum, boysenberry, blackberry and cassis. As it opens, prune and raisin develop alongside soy sauce, vanilla, clove and ginger, fresh leather saddle, cured meat and compost – compost, but in a good way. Punctuated with pepper and tobacco, the finish is long and tasty.

WSET Very Good wine with complex aromas and deep, full flavours, although slightly imbalanced with a heavier palate over the nose.  Drink now or cellar 3 more years.

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Porrera vi de Vila, Vall Llach, Priorat DOQ, Spain, 15.5% abv, 44.50 Euros

The drive from Falset to Porrera in southern Catalunya is not exactly for the faint of heart. We were told the tortuously narrow, winding roads are a huge improvement upon what used to be there.  At least they were paved – and it didn’t snow until a week after we’d been there.  Small mercies.La Sentin 3La Sentin 2

On our way, we stopped to take in some of the steep, slate moonscapes that were ostensibly vineyards.

One particularly impressive example turned out to be the La Sentin vineyard of Celler Vall Llach (right).  And upon arrival in tiny Porrera, the first street scene I took a picture of turned out to be the car of Vall Llach winemaker, Albert Costa (below).  This boded well.VL 1

At Vall Llach, we spent several hours with Roger Simó Garcia who guided us expertly through their sorting and bottling area as well as the separately housed storage cellars.  Along the way he entertained us with tales about Vall Llach’s unique ‘computer system’ (see below – these white boards were the compromise) and the philanthropy of the celler and its founders Lluis Llach and Enric Costa.vl 8

Located in the centre of tiny Porrera, Vall Llach was established in the early 1990s after Lluis returned to the town he’d grown up in.  The economy was terrible and few except the elderly lived there; farmers subsisted on hazelnut and almond crops, and the price of grapes was very low.VL 11

vl 7With René Barbier, Daphne Glorian and Alvaro Palacios making a name for Priorat wines in nearby Gratallops (and neighbours including Sangenis i Vacque working hard too), folksinger Llach believed he could do the same in Porrera.  Thus began the gentrification of the small Catalunyan town with the purchase of several hectares of ancient vineyards (some are 110 years old).

The wines of the two towns are different; Porrera is slightly cooler than Gratallops because it sits on a mountain pass that funnels cool winds in from the Mediterranean.   And while Gratallops works more with Garnaxa, Porreran wines focus on a Cariñena backbone.  Both share the llicorella/slate terroir and the steep slopes (as much as 80 degrees) to create unique wines.

The Porrera vi de Vila de Vall Llach used to be referred to as the ‘Vall Llach’ until the system was changed in 2009.  The Vi de Vila wines are meant to be the most typical versions of wines created in the Priorat DOQ towns.vl 2

About 6-7,000 bottles of the Vi de Vila de Vall Llach are made each year from 70% Cariñena for structure and longevity and 30% Garnaxa for fruit and a heady nose.  The grapes are vinified separately with indigenous yeast and only blended after aging 16 months in new French oak.  Grapes from three of the best vineyards are used – La Sentin, Cabaces, and L’Ermita de Sant Antoni.

The Vi de Vila de Vall Llach is developing and deep ruby red.  It has a strong carpentry upon which it hangs bright berries, plums, mocha and licorice alongside almonds, herbs and a crushed stone minerality.  Seamless and balanced even with the high alcohol, its tannins are ripe and green but show great promise for a long ageing window.   vl 4

WSET Outstanding wine from a winery with a strong philanthropic heart that has helped bring back life to its Priorat home.  vl 10

 

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Guiborat Fils, Blanc de Blancs, Extra Brut, Grand Cru, Cramant AC, Champagne, France, 2005, 12% abv.

guiborat 2005Owned by Richard and Karine Fouquet, this Guiborat Fils Grand Cru vintage champagne is produced from Chardonnay grapes in the quaint French village of Cramant.

Richard is the 5th generation of his family to be making champagne and he farms 8 ha of vines, the grapes from 5 ha of which are sold to Laurent Perrier.  The remaining 3 ha are used for their own champagnes, so production is metered and small.

We visited their Champagne house in June 2014, but purchased this in Seattle.  This is a vintage champagne with a pale lemon colour and a persistent, creamy mousse.

The nose is medium with aromas of lemon citrus and pear but is dominated by deep yeast and pastry.  The palate is dry with medium plus acidity, low alcohol and medium flavours of more citrus, lemon, pink grapefruit, freshly baked baguette and a long slightly bitter citrus pith finish.

There’s a Chablis-like crushed chalky rock characteristic as well to this WSET Very Good deep and rich, complex and layered bubble.

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Jacquesson, Cuvée No. 736, Extra Brut, Champagne, France, 12% abv, C$75 @ Marquis

panneau-dizyA celebrated Champagne house in operation since 1798, Jacquesson has been owned since 1974 by the Chiquet family and is located in Dizy, just north of Epernay.

jacquesson 1The family owns 31 ha of vineyards throughout Aÿ, Avize and Oiry, all Grand Crus, and the Premier Crus of Hautvillers, Dizy and Marueil-sur-Aÿ.  Their non-vintage cuvée  known as the 700 series started with 728 as the first one.

The 736 version is based on the 2008 vintage with some of the 2006 and 2007 thrown in for complexity.  The combination consists of 53% Chardonnay (for fruit and longevity), 29% Pinot Noir (for construction) and 18% Pinot Meunier (for roundness and fruit).

Pale lemon with a creamy, persistent mousse, the nose boasts sugared danish with Meyer lemon and yeasty, fresh bread.  The palate is dry with high, but not piercing, acidity.   Flavours of bright citrus and lemon, marzipan and more freshly baked baguette compliment the wine – and no bitterness to speak of.

This wine is beautifully delineated and clear, crisp but not austere – a suave and complex bubble with a long finish.

We enjoyed it with sushi and great new friends.  Buy it in Vancouver at Marquis Wine Cellars on Davie Street.

WSET Very Good +

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Ava, Le Vieux Pin, Okanagan Valley VQA, BC, 2012, 14% abv.

le vieux pin avaHere’s a BC bottle made in the image of a white Rhône Valley wine.

The Ava is fashioned from 61% Viognier, 21% Roussanne and 18% Marsanne grapes that have seen about half of it age in new French barrels for 9 months and about a third in new oak.

These are late-ripening grapes, so it can be challenging to make sure they’re ready in the brief but warm summers the Okanagan Valley experiences.  This vintage was significantly warmer though than the previous two vintages.

Pale lemon with light legs, the nose has average intensity of lemon, yellow grapefruit and green melon with almond, citrus pith and oak.

The palate is dry with refreshing acidity and flavours of more lemon and citrus with bitter almond, ripe apricot and and white peach.  The finish is good and the wine delicious, albeit a little out of balance with the slightly hot and heavy alcohol.

WSET Good – drink with chicken or other roasted bird dishes.

 

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Chateau Musar, Bekaa Valley, Lebanon, 1996, 13% abv.

chat musarTo say Lebanese wines are some of the oldest in the world isn’t a stretch – there are production records dating back to the 8th century BC.

When Gaston Hochar decided to reinvigorate the fine wine industry and increase the quality of Lebanese wines in the 1930s, he planted what have since become some of the most famous vines in the world.  His son Serge (who trained with Emile Peynaud), and grandsons Ralph and Marc have continued his work.

The Cabernet Sauvignon, Carignan and Cinsault blends that comprise the top Chateau Musar wine have been produced every year since then except for two when civil war proved too much to overcome.  The war forced them though in 1972 to find an overseas market – and they did.  That’s when Britain welcomed and ‘discovered’ these wines.

The Cabernet gives the wine carpentry and structure while the Carignan offers spiced fruit.  Cinsault makes sure the wines are beautifully perfumed – the scent is what has been making Lebanese wine famous for 1000s of years.  These wines have long macerations of up to 5 weeks and then gentle extraction until 6-9 months when they are put into oak barrels (up to 1/3 new oak) for 10-14 months.  There are usually 25,000 bottles made per vintage.

The Chateau Musar 1996 is a medium cherry-garnet red, hazy with medium legs.  We were surprised it’s not fully terra cotta as it’s 19 years old.  It’s an unfined and unfiltered wine, so the hazy quality is to be expected but it had no negative effect on it.  There was very little sediment to speak of.

Clean and fully developed, it’s got high toned and intense aromas of cherry kirsch, red plum, strawberry, clove, herbs and tobacco.

Completely integrated and with soft tannins, the wine is dry but with a sweet’ish profile, medium plus acidity and flavours of more dried strawberry, dried cherry and cranberry with plum, sweet tobacco leaf, red licorice, clove and cinnamon.  A dried herbal element emerged after a short time – sage and dried rose. The finish was good but did diminish in the glass over a couple of hours.

Balanced alcohol, married tannins and fruit, silky, still bright and stunning, this wine is on the lighter side.  A WSET Very Good Plus.

If you have any, don’t decant, drink now or enjoy for 3-5 more years.  Thanks for sharing, Marta!

Posted in Cabernet Sauvignon / Blends, Carignan, Cinsault, Lebanon, OTHER, RED | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments