Monday, June 23, 2025

Stop and Blind the Rosés.

As the spring weather transitions into summer, the new vintages of 2024 rosés are blossoming into my glass and out of the garden. Seemed like an apt time to open a trio of this years German offerings from some of my favorite producers! 


the Line Up
Seehof Pinot Noir Rosé 
Von Winning Pinot Noir Rosé 
Kruger Rumpf Pinot Noir Rosé 
(all 2024 vintage)


My Thoughts and the Results...

VON WINNING PINOT NOIR ROSE (90pts)
Aromas of spicy berry, deep floral essence, watermelon, summer berry, citrus blossom and a touch peppery arugula or wrinkled cress.
Palate has a juicy summer berry backbone with glimpses of herbal and citrus glimpses as the flavors evolve in the glass.Watermelon rind, citrus oils, unripe peach, sage, honeysuckle, tart golden raspeberry.
Lengthy evolving palate with all the hallmarks of a delicious pinot based rosé. Focused acidity, layered summer fruits and a delicate persistent finish.

KRUGER RUMPF PINOT NOIR ROSE (88pts)
Touch of gassy bubble on the pour. Aromas are white tea, orange blossoms, wildflower honey, raspberry leaf and earthy cherry pits and some wet slate.
Palate is soft and supple on the front end with notes of cantaloupe, wild strawberry, orange pith and sage. Touch of prickle on the tongue that livens the front end and refreshing acidity that draws out the finish nicely with lingering stonefruit, sage and lingering minerality that weaves through the bitter melon rind finish.

SEEHOF PINOT NOIR ROSE (87pts)
Inviting aromas of citrus oils, wild strawberry, green rhubarb and white flowers.
Palate follows the nose nicely with focused summer berry fruit that evokes nuances of smarties candy, cherry skins, earthy blueberry, elderflowers, flowering thyme, nectarine that all harmonize in a cohesive easy drinking with nice structure, refreshing acidity and lingering herbal accents.


A pleasure to sip each and everyone over a couple days and honestly, I would highly recommend trying them all. Also, yes summer and rosé go hand and hand, but please do not put them away like your white pants when labor day rolls around. Rosé is great year round and it is such a versatile wine that bridges the red/white divide and accompanies food and conversation with the best of them! 


Happy Summer 2025... stay tuned for more as we explore, forage, sip and share!

Sunday, June 1, 2025

Into the Land of Bourgueil.

Ok, getting back on track for the Loire Project here. I know I had been teasing Savienerre for my next region as I jumped through the different appellations of Anjou. Well forget that, after a few cool rainy nights and a late night accompanied by a friend that was curious about cab franc, I derailed that plan and cracked into some offerings from Bourgueil.

( a general view of Bourgueil from wikipedia)

Much like Chinon, Bourgueil has a similar breath of soil types ranging from sand, gravel and the classic tuffeau along with some protection from the cold northern winds by surrounding forests. A region located just west of Tours, along the right bank of the Loire. There are many similarities in comparison to Chinon and Saumur, yet while sipping these wines there is an undeniable uniqueness of Bourgueil. That being said, I am still making my way through investigating the characteristics and terroir of this appellation and will share some of my findings, conclusions and insights in part two.


the LINE UP
Catherine Breton Trinch 2023
Domaine de Chevalerie Chevalerie 2019
Domaine du Changeon Les Passagers 2020
Domaine du Bel Air Les Vingt Lieus Dits 2020



You know the drill by now, all four poured blind and assessed, lets get into  the results!


My Thoughts and the Results...

Domaine de Chevalerie Chevalerie 2019 (90pts)
Aromas of dense cherry, earthy composted forest floor, iron, violets, black olive, plum skin and a touch of tarragon.
Palates is bright upfront with unctuous cherry flesh leading the way into raspberry, plum and some of that underlying earthy compost from the nose. Great balance of acidity and dark fleshy fruits opening up a complex palate with nuances of blood orange, tar, pomegranate, wet moss and wood chips.
Tuned to perfection!


Catherine Breton Trinch 2023 (86pts)
Aromas of raspberry coulis, cherry skins, cherry pie, decaying mulch, licorice and juicy berry.
Palate is fruit forward like the nose with layers of berry compote, cherry skins, apple skins, wild strawberry, peony, sorrel and soft earthy nuances of wet leaves and pine needles tease out the finish as the fruit fades. 
Harmonious integration of earth and fruit with supple weight to ride out the acidity nicely.
 

Domaine du Changeon Les Passagers 2020 (85pts)
Aromas of candied fruit, wood ear mushroom, cedar, flinty graphite, raspberry cordial and nuanced baking spice.
Palate is red fruit forward but leaning into a earthy cranberry, elderberry and dried blueberry. Musty forest floor permeates through the fruit and draws out some green floral herbaceous, along with a touch of bitter tannic bite that grips late and settles out with the earthy fruit.
Nice evolving palate with nice balance but just not enough acidity to shine as bright as I feel this wine could have shined.


Domaine du Bel Air Les Vingt Lieus Dits 2020 (80pts)
Aromas are brettanomyces forward with some barnyard composted red fruits, pine, rosemary, macerated raspberry along with some steamy upturned compost, sandalwood and dried holiday floral Christmas tree potpourri.
Palate is herbaceous, heavy on the pine, spruce and rosemary flavors harnessed slightly by some dark concentrated blackberry, cherry skin and wet composting leaves.
Some redeeming qualities but a bit too Christmassy... honestly it reminds me of opening the attic aged box of Christmas decorations that contains an old yankee candle holiday spice selection. 


Overall a delicious line up and I would be curious to see how the Domaine du Bel Air would hold up on its own, with a nice meal... the good and bad with these single blinds is it really dials in your palate to focus on the differences in each glass, the contrasting elements will always be what stands out and sometimes you have associations or just feel overpowered by its uniqueness. Occasionally that uniqueness can win you over and occasionally it can push you away.

I have a handful of higher tier Bourgueils to dive into soon as the heat of summer and the hustle and bustle associated with it gets well underway. Hot days in the garden have had more glasses of rose' being poured as well as the emergence of daiquiri season, a personal favorite of mine!

Surely I will be posting more as my journey to forage the perfect bottle and glass continues...