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Moët & Chandon Brut Impérial NV

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We're celebrating tonight. Chris will know why. He will also, I hope, enjoy the fact that we're using him as an excellent excuse to have some nice wines. The irony with wines such as this is that they are incredibly fun to drink but boring to write about, as the aim is consistency, year-on-year. I shall soldier on, though, no matter how arduous the task.

Lively mousse, moderately fine bead. A lovely, fresh aroma of mushroom, yeast, citrus and some rounder, strawberry-like notes. It's all very refined and "just so", but never difficult and certainly savoury enough to stimulate one's appetite for more. Balance is the key word on the palate too, with a variety of dimensions showing just enough of themselves to add complexity without dominance. Flavour profile is refreshing, with citrus, some smokiness and an impression of clean, delicate fruit. Good complexity. Mouthfeel is clean and refreshing without undue coarseness or aggressive acidity. Certainly on the finer side, and appropriately so -- it's a wine clearly weighted for immediate, joyous consumption. 

The vague impression of a highly calculated, industrial product is easily brushed aside by the sheer quality and sophistication of this wine. Fun, smart and so, so easy to drink. To Chris: don't worry, we're saving the best for December. 

Price: $A70
Closure: Cork
Date tasted: August

Arrogant Frog Lily Pad White Viognier 2006

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Full marks for creativity. As a name and label concept, the "Arrogant Frog" range is all very New World, and I'm sure you don't need me unravel the various ironies here. The angle is "best of both worlds;" New World approachability combined with Old World character. This is so fraught with stereotypes that I won't even attempt to engage it, but I can certainly taste and write about what's inside the bottle. 

Quite a pretty appearance, with good clarity and a lightly golden hue. Served cold, this wine smells of very little. Perhaps some subtle spice and a little floral perfume. It really needs to become quite warm, just off room temperature or thereabouts, to show a richer, more fruit driven aroma, mostly high toned apricot with perhaps some vanilla. It never becomes truly expressive, though, and strikes me as slightly dilute.

The palate shows a syrupy, viscous mouthfeel and notes of spice and tinned apricot. It's full to the point of feeing thick in the mouth. The flavour profile is quite simple and shows a little alcohol burn on the finish (the label says 13.5%). Structurally, there's not a lot of acidity, so the wine collapses gently in the mouth, with a wash of viscosity that's generous but formless too. The after palate and finish tapers off but some residual flavour lingers longer than one might expect.

This is a clean wine with straightforward flavours and a notably viscous mouthfeel. There isn't a huge number of straight Viogniers on the local market, so if you're after a well-priced example, you may find this satisfactory, especially if you serve it on the warm side. Not a lot of depth or sophistication here, though.

Price: $A9.50
Closure: Stelvin
Date tasted: August 2008

Domaine Gautheron Chablis 1er Cru Vaucoupin

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It's a balmy Summer's Winter's evening here in Brisbane, and I'm in the mood for Chablis. Handily, I had this lying around the house. This particular wine sees no oak at all, so in theory should express pure Chardonnay fruit and, one hopes, its corresponding terroir

Nice light golden colour with a hint of green. The nose is complex with powdery florals and a hint of sweetness, along with edgier notes that suggest minerals or crushed shells. There's also a slight smokiness or perhaps mushroom that I find interesting. It's attractive and bounces between austerity and generosity without landing firmly at either end of the spectrum. The palate, by contrast, sits more clearly at the generous end, albeit with a firm mineral backbone to keep things shapely. Mouthfeel here is quite round and smooth, creating a seductive impression on entry. Underlying this mouthfeel is fine acidity of the slightly relaxed type, but in balance and firm enough to hold the wine's line. Fruit is crisp and brisk whilst showing excellent intensity. Some pear, perhaps, and a sweeter edge that's not quite honey but more ripe stonefruit. I wonder if there is a bit of Botrytis here? Just when you think the mid-palate will collapse under its own weight, minerality kicks in and carries the wine home through the after palate. Finish is mostly savoury and quite long. 

Admittedly, it's not the most elegant style, but I find a lot to enjoy in this wine. There's flavour in abundance, nice three-dimensionality and a very seductive texture in the mouth. Good value, I think. As an aside, the cork on this bottle was ridiculously tight. Worth the effort, though.

Price: $A38
Closure: Cork
Date tasted: July 2008
A slightly older white Burgundy this time, which will hopefully come as a relief after a slew of younger siblings. As an aside, at Full Pour we taste wines in a "real world" context as much as possible, which often means a single bottle at a time, often sipped slowly all evening. This serves to highlight the role of variety in enjoyment. A self-confessed addict of difference, I find working my way through a series of similar wines both highly revealing and slightly boring at the same time. Still, there are worse things I could do...

Pretty golden hay colour, good clarity. A really seductive nose, with rich almond, grapefruit, butter, and some clear botrytis influence. It's a wine that reaches out of the glass and sucks you in without resorting to excess vulgarity -- sort of like the difference between someone with a magnetic personality versus someone who is just loud. There are also hints of roast nut and spice that add complexity to the aroma profile. The palate delivers solidly on the nose. Entry is slippery-slidey, without any acidic harshness and yet showing freshness and vitality. Rich, round fruit builds on the tongue towards the middle palate, just as some acid structure starts to tingle on the edges of the tongue. Despite the freshness, this is a relaxed, generous wine that you don't have to work especially hard to enjoy. A lot of this is to do with the ultra silky mouthfeel that balances slipperiness with acidity most satisfyingly. More citrus fruit and hints of sweet honey coat the tongue. The savoury nut/oak observed on the nose props up the fruit flavour in balanced fashion. If it's not quite as complex as the nose suggests, this is easily compensated by the smooth, easy elegance of this wine. A nutty lift through the after palate keeps on rising through a very satisfying, flavoursome finish.

Yum!  I'm tempted to say this wine lacks a certain sophistication, but that's not quite right. It's breezy yet substantial, and echoes a sense of generous provincial hospitality. Its mix of fresh and ultra-ripe notes is, I find, beguiling. Delicious, bloody good value, and quite different from all the other white Burgundies recently tasted.

Domaine Emilian Gillet
Price: $A34
Closure: Cork
Date tasted: June 2008

Such is the allure of the great vineyards of Burgundy that those sites with any connection, however tenuous, to vines of renown are almost relentlessly flogged as such. Who am I to buck the trend? En Remilly, the source of this wine, is usually mentioned in the same breath as Le Montrachet, as it is on the same slope above its more famous neighbour.  Does proximity to greatness mean anything in this hottest of terroir hotbeds?

The nose certainly promises good things. It's soft, delicate, and rounded, with floral notes dominating a background of subtle cashew oak, lovely flint and even some banana. Smelling this wine is like sniffing a well-planned garden just coming into bloom. It has the same freshness and intermingled complexity of aroma.

The palate takes these elements and amplifies them, while retaining a similar balance. The entry displays fresh, fine acidity that lingers on the tip of the tongue, then leads the way to the mid-palate ahead of delicate yet persistent fruit flavour. There's still tight focus as we reach the wine's mid-point, but the flavour profile by now shows its full spectrum of elements. Lightfooted citrus fruit and flinty minerality are the key ingredients, and play off each other beautifully. There's also some creaminess and lightly nutty oak in the background. The fruit is clingy but not cloying, thanks to the freshness of the acidity, and shows great definition. Structure relaxes a little out as it moves through the after palate, and spreads the same clingy fruit throughout the mouth ahead of an impressively long finish.

The wine continued to improve and gain weight all evening, and I think reached its peak at a relatively warm temperature (just lightly chilled), so don't be afraid to serve it even warmer than you might other Chardonnays. It's not a blockbuster by any means, as it showcases delicacy and balance above power. But it's pure and balanced and deliciously intense. A lovely style and one of my favourites in the recent pack of white Burgundies tasted at Full Pour. Good value.

Domaine Alain Chavy
Price: $A44
Closure: Cork
Date tasted: June 2008

All signs point to vin de terroir: little bits of unidentified crud on the cork, cheap glass, a label that looks like it was generated with Broderbund Print Shop circa 1992, and a Kermit Lynch importer's sticker on the back. Sure enough, the wine is noticeably light in color in the glass, and it doesn't smell like a New World wine at all. There's sort of a sweet, smoky, summer sausage smell (sorry for the alliteration, it just came out that way) here, balanced out with dusty closet and violets.

In terms of feel, the wine is light in the mouth, fairly tannic, and leaves behind a noticeable whack of unresolved tannins; it's presumably best eaten with something meaty to balance out the tannin. It's not unpleasant, though; I remember the very first wines I ever tried as being somewhat similar. Being a Californian, is it just possible that I've grown up with wines designed for American consumers? That is, wines that are designed to be as innocuous as possible? The surprise tannin onslaught is kind of enjoyable; it leaves a pleasant tobacco leaf taste behind, and it's a nice change from the usual fruit bomb effect that leaves you with nothing but a hangover the next morning.

Over time, I came to the conclusion that this doesn't taste like any wine I know of, and that's a wonderful thing. I have no idea if this is typical for Bourgeuil; I've never had it before (only Chinon). Plus, at this price, c'mon, there are a million boring Californian wines for fifteen bucks out there - why not try something radically different for a change?

Domaine de la Chanteleuserie
Price: US $14.99
Closure: Cork
Date tasted: June 2008

Distinctive, sharp nose that is part oak, part chalky mineral note (almost lipsticky in character). There may be a bit of sulfur still floating around in there, but the wine's minerality seems more terroir-driven. There's also some fruit, austerely honeydew melon like, and a bit of creaminess too.

Entry is crisp and finely acidic, with fruit flavour that builds along the wine's line. It's almost like flavour starts to radiate out from a focused structural line, and it's only towards the mid-palate that you realise the fruit here is actually quite intense and assertive. Flavour profile is firmly in line with the nose, in that it's almost entirely savoury and tilted towards a funky minerality that will be, I'd wager, a matter of taste. Oak is present, for sure, but not a dominant feature. The sulfur is a bit distracting to me, so I hope some time in bottle (or even glass) will help that to disappear. Some rounded fruit emerges as the wine leaves the mid-palate, and it's this slightly softer note that carries through the after palate onto the lengthy, and somewhat chalky, finish.

I'm going to see how this goes through the evening and report back.

Well, a little time (an hour perhaps) in the glass, and this wine is presenting well. It's still a savoury, structured wine, but given this, it's well balanced and shows good intensity with impressive length. There are also some additional fruit notes, tropical in character, that have started to peak out from under the savouriness. A really characterful wine.

Clos Salomon
Price: $A37
Closure: Cork
Date tasted: May 2008
And now we begin on the 1er Cru white Burgundies, albeit those from lesser appellations. We've already tasted this maker's Pernand-Vergelesses village-level wine, which was a tasty, albeit not especially refined, drop. This wine, at $A59, is $A12 more expensive. What does this extra money buy the punter?

A fair degree more refinement, as it turns out, although the character of the wine is broadly in line with the village wine. The nose shows toasty almond, caramel and soft melon fruit, which sounds sloppy but is in fact crisp and well defined. Entry is sufficiently acidic to prop up more flavours of almond paste and caramel butter, with some citrus and stone fruit, and an overall impression of baked things. I like the way the wine is fresh and well structured without being forbidding,  a hint of mineral contributing to this sense of vitality. Intensity is notable, and the wine seems intent on finding every corner of the mouth and staying put. The slightly lifted after palate shows good extension through the back of the mouth, and the finish is well shaped and of good length.

All in all, I like this wine's flavour profile and sense of style. It's a lot more refined than the village wine, although I still wouldn't call it the ultimate in sophistication. I should note that the other half took an instant, firm dislike to this wine's flavours, finding them unpleasantly sharp and perhaps even volatile. I can understand that point of view, as there's a pungent, perhaps herbal edge to the wine's flavour profile that may not be to everyone's taste.

Update: I left half a bottle in the fridge for two days and am consuming the remainder now. It has come together well, with flavours further integrating and becoming less angular, though it's still an assertive, distinctive wine. Nice wine if you like the style.

Domaine Rapet Père et Fils
Price:
$A59
Closure:
Cork
Date tasted:
May 2008
At $A55, this is the most expensive white Burgundy so far amongst the 2005s recently tasted by me on Full Pour, and approximately equivalent (with the dollar the way it is) in price to the Domaine Fontaine-Gagnard tasted by Chris the other day. Unlike that wine, this is classified as village-level. We're still playing at the lower end of the price scale as far as these wines are concerned, but at twice the cost of some wines tasted earlier in this series, one could rightly expect a corresponding increase in quality.

A fresh, relatively full nose of round citrus and melon fruit, and a hint of caramel. There are also powdery notes, part floral and part mineral, that add a whole layer of high toned complexity. It's altogether very attractive, though tight and coiled too.  Entry is clean and crisp, with a lovely fresh mouthfeel and bright acidity counterbalanced by impressively intense fruit that builds towards the mid-palate. There are some subtle winemaker inputs here (a hint of butterscotch and spice) but it's primarily a fruit-driven wine. The tasty fruit is all about grapefruity citrus flavour and, as the after palate begins, the fruit explodes out of its focused centre to coat the insides of the mouth with surprising, quite pleasing aggressiveness. The effect, combined with the wine's acid structure, is mouthwatering. Nice focus through the finish.

It's a little austere at the moment, but this wine is clearly a good one, with a nice line through the palate and good fruit. I'd love to see this in a little while, when hopefully the acidity will have integrated somewhat and allowed the fruit to flow more liberally.

Domaine Alain Chavy
Price: $A55
Closure: Cork
Date tasted: May 2008
A coworker suggested I buy a bottle of this, so I stopped by the local grog shop (Vintage Wines Ltd.) on my way home from work. Good thing I did; I so seldom drink Chardonnay that I'd forgotten what a good Chardonnay experience can be like.

At first I was certain I was smelling the distant smoke of a sagebrush wildfire drifting over Coronado Bay, but then it moved more transparently towards a salt toffee, butterscotch note. On second thought, it could be hazelnut biscotti; it's lovely, toasty, and smells like it more properly belongs in a bakery.

In the mouth, the flavor lazily bounces between an acidic, almost kiwifruit aspect, a sort of rich sage honey, and a sort of almost gritty, stony minerality. Most interestingly, none of it feels forced or overworked; although I'm sure that some of the texture and smell here is likely due to winemaker intervention, it all feels entirely appropriate. The finish lasts for a good half a minute, and eventually suggests hazelnuts, fresh buttermilk biscuits, and something almost like pickled watermelon rind. In fact, this sort of milky earthiness almost reminds me of a cloudy rice wine; it's a fascinating effect, coming to the foreground only after the initial acidic shock of the bright, crisp fruit fades away.

I'd drink this sort of wine more often if it didn't totally blow out my wallet, alas.

Domaine Fontaine-Gagnard
Price
: US $55
Closure: Cork
Date tasted: May 2008

About Full Pour

Full Pour is a place for two long time friends, and fellow wine nuts, to document their ongoing vinous adventures.

It's a place to celebrate wine (from the cheap to the rarified), to share impressions, complain, exalt, dissect and guzzle. It's also a place to learn and, hopefully, enjoy the company of like-minded people.

Full Pour is Christopher Pratt and Julian Coldrey, with occasional guest contributors.

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