Château Pierre-Bise Savennières Roches aux Moines 2011
25 May 2015
LOIRE CHENIN AND JAPANESE MALT
Château Pierre-Bise Savennières Roches aux Moines 2011
$51; 14.5% alcohol;
cork; 93 points
Château Pierre-Bise Savennières Roches aux Moines is
hardly the name on everyone's lips. It's a small Chenin blanc vineyard in
schisty stones on the north bank of the Loire in Atlantic France. I'm not
reviewing this to tease you with such a rarity, but to make a point about
Chenin.
In the early 'eighties I fell in love with the
astonishing Chenins blanc of Moulin-Touchais, another Loire producer. These
were very high acid botrytised wines that were fermented to the point of
dryness, but not quite. They'd live for amazing lengths of time, corks willing.
As did the Chenins from Marc Bredif.
While this wine is almost dry, I suspect its fruit has
had a lick of the noble rot, too.
Then, unusual for the region, this one's had a perfectly
natural malo-lactic ferment, when bacteria convert the harsh metallic malic
acid of the grape to lactic, the softer acid of milk. This secondary ferment
has nothing to do with yeast or alcohol, but it has a profound effect on
flavour and texture. Atop the glycerol that botrytis produces, the 'malo' has
made this wine softer and much more approachable than the austere
Moulin-Touchais, or most Australian Chenin blanc.
I doubt whether it gets much botrytis, but the old
Tintookie Chenin blanc vineyard of Drew Dowie and Lulu Lunn in Blewett Springs
sometimes goes into a deluxe wood-fermented wild yeast Dowie Doole wine named
after the vineyard. It's exquisite wine: the 2008's on the shelves now at $35.
If you go to the winery and you're very good, you might get some 2006. I'll
review those a week or two.
Meanwhile, the glass in hand: Windfall pears and gilt
leaves burnishing in the wet autumn grass. Leatherwood honey. Candied lemons.
Cinder toffee. All things ripening and mellow and lush. Lots of the vanilloids
of decay. Perfect for this time of the year - don't chill it hard: ten minutes
in the ice bucket should do it.
It has a quaint fluffy texture, with a tidying burlap
prickle in the tail. It feels like it might be sweeter, but that's delusion.
All those aromas meld beautifully into the same flavours, making one imagine a
sweet clear jelly made from all the above, with a clove and maybe a juniper
berry. The wine has perfect balance, with acidity that appears more gentle than
it probably is on paper: all that flesh cuddles it up and hides it.
But it's not sweet. Well, not very.
It reminds me a little of the Ribbon Series 'spätlese'
Rieslings Orlando made in the 'seventies and 'eighties from the vineyards up in
the high gully beside Trial Hill Road. These dried off with bottle age and were
always perfect with a cup of milk tea and a slab of yeasty apple or apricot
streuselkuchen. At eleven sharp.
You can buy this wine at The Edinburgh: East End should
stock it too, or get some in. Approach it like a Burgundy and save $100!
The Yamazaki
Single Malt Whisky Aged 12 Years
$115; 43% alcohol; cork; 96 points
An unlikely coupling, putting this up against a Chenin
from the Loire?
Nope.
Call me nuts, but these two drinks share a great deal of
aroma and flavour. While this one has three times the burnies and more obvious
oak and comes from a pure malt scotch recipe as made in Japan, it shares many
of those autumnal tones of the Loire wine.
While that softening malo-lactic fermentation took the
sharpest edges off the Loire, this prime whisky's alcohol and brisk oak have
the opposite effect. But while we have these extremes of edge, the aromas ring
many of the same old bells. Like this is sharp and appropriately hot; the
wine's the opposite. But the flavours are very close.
Test me: after you've finished the last of a glass of
this with a little water, rinse the glass with the Chenin and savour it. The
transition is as smooth as.
This is the extreme pointy end of the whisky business. Crisp.
Almost digital. Imagine Sony making a malt. It's be as precise and technical as
this brilliant tincture, but with all that matter-of-fact Sony helpfulness. They
make great cameras. I wish they'd make a car. I reckon I'd get my license back,
just to bung on some music and take the Sony for drive. And Sony twelve year
old single malt? Bring it on. That's why I don't drive.
Like the best malts of Tasmania (Lark; Hellyer's Road),
this is the current pinnacle of whisky.
The pears, the autumnal jelly ... hit it with some rain,
and it gets even closer to the Chenin. But forget the streuselkuchen. When you
finally tumble outa the royal cot, gird your plaid, toast some dark rye and
spread some of last night's cold haggis on it. I'm sure you'll find the odd
overlooked scrap somewhere on the table. Check the middle, where the wolfhounds
can't reach. You might be lucky.
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1 comment:
The glass or two on your porch were the nicest glasses of that whisky I ever had. The air is so nice around there... I swear it made a difference.
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