While you're planning your hangover material, I suggest you begin the foundations of your new gastronomic year with my two top wines of 2013. Terribly expensive, sure, and a dreadful tease, certainly, they're well beyond my meagre financial grasp. (Generous friends have shared these precious bottles, giving us a chance to drink rather than taste.) But I'm determined that they're far and away the most memorable tinctures to flow down my little red lane in the past twelve months. Go wreck whatever's left of that plastic:
24 December 2013
KRUG AND LA TÂCHE TOP TINCTURES OF '13
While you're planning your hangover material, I suggest you begin the foundations of your new gastronomic year with my two top wines of 2013. Terribly expensive, sure, and a dreadful tease, certainly, they're well beyond my meagre financial grasp. (Generous friends have shared these precious bottles, giving us a chance to drink rather than taste.) But I'm determined that they're far and away the most memorable tinctures to flow down my little red lane in the past twelve months. Go wreck whatever's left of that plastic:
Krug Champagne 1998
$450; cork; 12% alcohol; 97+++ points
It's two years since I first drank this
exquisity; another chance at it last June showed it hadn't budged, and my
original notes pretty much say it all. I prefer its finesse to the brilliant
current release, the richer 2000:
There's an apocryphal yarn
about the murderer who, upon being strapped into the electric chair, looked at
his executioner and said "This'll teach me". This wine always reminds
me of that. I don't really know why: the damned thing is so profoundly confronting
in its beauty and intensity that the mind does go silly, in a willy-nilly,
electrocuted sort of way. Thoughts fall to the floor and shatter harmlessly
about the drinker: they no longer count. Perhaps it's also the serene
expectation that one will soon be found dead in one's chair with a really silly
smile and a glass, empty, clutched in a grip that makes Charlton Heston's
rifleman speech look like something uttered by a total softcock.
The smell of an organic wheatfield, almost ripe, after the lightest rain. The
smell of the most delicate brioche. Hazelnut. Wet chalk. Sliced, poached almond
being fastidiously placed on a perfect marzipan icing in the kitchen of La
Crayere. Oyster mushroom, and enoki. I can smell it for an hour, happy to
postpone the execution. But finally, involuntarily, the glass finds its way to
the lips, and like all Krug, its liquor just seems to evaporate into my organs. My body.
The corpuscles, the genes, the chromasomes vibrate in immaculate harmony, and
purr. This must send a transmission so powerful it can be received by other
life forms, billions of light years away.
Remi Krug remarked twenty years ago that he admired the way I guzzled his Grand
Cuvee, rather than inhaling common air through it to make that obscene gurgling
noise and spitting it like an Englishman. "But I am a Vikin, and Krug
comes properly perforated with bubbles installed by the Krug family," I
responded. "It needs no other air buggering it up." And so it goes.
No need to change the technique. Gulp it down! Have it from a bigger glass!
Pour yourself a tumbler! Do it again! Sell your house!
“It’s like music”, Krug
pondered aloud. “There is real music, like Duke Ellington and Ella Fitzgerald.
And then there is airport music. Unfortunately, too much champagne is airport
music. When I met my wife, she drank the airport music, and she always said it
gave her a headache and she would not marry me. So I gave her some Krug, and
when she had it she said ‘Ah, this is good, I don’t have a headache’, and so
she could marry me. Of course when I discovered she did not have a headache, I
could marry her. And so for many years we have Krugged along together.”
Half their Kruggin’ luck, I say.
Domaine de la
Romanée-Conti La Tâche 2009
AU$3500 - $4000; 13.5% alcohol; cork; 97+++ points
I first drank this in 2012. A second schlück
in November 2013 earned it another point. 2009 was a wet vintage in Burgundy,
with the sorts of moulds and funguses that made 2011 very tricky in South
Australia. But as happened here, through
fastidious bunch selection, the smartest winegrowers managed to produce
exceptional wine. In spite of its price hike in the meantime, my second taste
simply re-affirmed these original opinions:
I know I'm gonna get a
backful of silver forks for this, but I honestly wonder how many Australian
winemakers would recognise this as Pinot noir. All the stuff most were taught
to find in good Pinot is barely here. Unless indicating abject derision,
I rarely use capitals in my tasting notes, but on this wine they're huge:
"NO STRAWBERRIES NO RASPBERRIES NO CHERRIES" they shout. The
secret is the La Tâche vineyard, which has been there by the Burgundian village
of Vosne-Romanée for over 800 years. Think six hectares of 50± year old
vines on the world's most expensive irony limestone, pruned so hard it takes
three vines to fill a bottle. The vineyard is managed using very old
organic and biodynamic methods; like Moon, horses, no tractors, and only
vine-derived compost. Along with the wine from its neighbouring 1.8 ha Romanée-Conti
vineyard, it's as good and expensive as Pinot gets, and is simply revered in
the arcane world of the Burgundiac and Pinotphile. This 2009 is being
compared to the majestic 1990. But if there's no primary fruit, what
makes it great? Structure. Tannin. Acidity? The most
ethereal and fleeting wafts of perfume? But really, the damn thing seemed
chockers with the nightshade aromas: the dark green aromas of those leaves, as
if in thick black tea. Pepper, juniper, leather, valerian, coaldust, all
sat there. Surly, glowering. Daring me. "Maybe the closest we get to
fruit is a faint whiff of coconut butter", I concluded, mystified.
But then, wakey-wakey: the initial glimmers of something between tart juniper
berry, sweet beetroot and very bitter cherry began to stir, and long after
pouring the thing had awoken sufficiently to give just a glimpse of the overt
sensuality which will dominate when the juice of those very special grapes
eventually matures to swell and fill the wine's dusty, tannic whalebone corset.
In, what? Twenty years? In the meantime, a good whipping would be in order
before we do any mouth work.
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