Inaugural E-Mail Wines
These are the wines featured in the inaugural E-Mail.
We start off with the Kurt Angerer Kies Gruner Veltliner from 2008:
A clean Gruner Veltliner with overwhelming scents of peaches and green apple skins right away in the nose. There is also a bit of steely minerality here too but it works into the fruit smells in a way that makes me wanna holla. The taste is pure, simple and unadulterated pleasure. Again very clean and the fruits carry into the mouth but there is also zingy/zippy acids that make the wine almost fizz away into the finish. And the finish… well it hung around long enough for me to wonder if I was still drinking it some minutes later and that made me smile a silly smile of joy. In all I dig this wine quite a bit because it has something that most Gruners don’t: lasting power contained in a light bodied white wine. This wine is drinking great right now but in all fairness could last in your cellar for another 8-12 years before going south. Don’t believe me… skip to the last wine.
Email Price: $14.99 | Regular Price: $18.99 | Best Internet: $15.99
Bottles Available: 48
Get the wine here
Next off is the Birgit Eichinger Gaisberg Riesling from 2005:
This wine smells smart. Not in that smarty pants kind of way but it smells how a smartly dressed man/woman would smell if you caught them walking down the street. You know, all pinstripes and tailored. Just smart. Replete with apricot and honey in the nose. The mouth is dry but with a weighty body that coated my tongue with goodness. This wine is perfect with heavily spiced dishes and worked well three days after opening.
Email Price: $12.99 | Regular Price: $19.99 | Best Internet: $20.99
Bottles Available: 42
Get the wine here
Moving into the red category with the Ecker Zweigelt 2007:
OK, I have an admission to make: I love the wines of Beaujolais. Not the crap they wheel out at Thanksgiving time but the fruity, soft and easy kind that is becoming harder and harder to find done well. The Ecker is a wonderful Austrian take on the easy quaffing wine that should be most Beaujolais. Fruit nose of cherries, blackberries and spice out of the nose move into a soft and welcoming mouth. In all honesty this wine didn’t wow me at first blush but after it was open for a couple of hours it changed into a truly enjoyable wine that I wished hadn’t gone so fast. On top of all that this wine comes in a liter sized bottle… one quarter more for the same price. Also I think that this wine and ribs might be a natch!
Email Price: $10.99 | Regular Price: $14.99 | Best Internet: $11.99
Bottles Available: 120
Get the wine here
The next red is from Weingut Prieler and is their Blaufrankish 2005:
Blaufrankish, better known as Lemberger (Germany) or Kerkfrancos (Hungary) is a wine variety that I think more of us should get to know. Imagine all the power, lushness and grace of a great Merlot with the body and soul of Burgundian Pinot Noir and you will come close to what good Blaufrankish is all about. Smokey blueberries right away combined with white pepper in the nose lead way to a rich body. There is also a bit of what the French would call Merde de Lapin here that I really like (note: I do not have extensive knowledge of what rabbit poo smells like but this wine phrase can loosely be translated into barnyardy…). This wine is simple and sublime all at the same time and by day three of being open was just as enjoyable as day one. This is a wine that could stand up to some big protein but could just as well go by itself. A winner amongst all the winners here.
Email Price: $17.99 | Regular Price: $27.99 | Best Internet: $18.99
Bottles Available: 35
Get the wine here
I know I should stop here but there is just one more wine that came across my dining room table (where I do all the in-home baby watching tastings). This is a gem and while it is spendy it is also something that I feel much better having had. Ladies and Gents, it is my pleasure to introduce you to a 32 year old Gruner Veltliner; the 1976 Domine Leth Schieben Reserve Gruner Veltliner:
A real treat of a wine! Imagine a wine to rival the instant joy of long aged Burgundy but costing a, seriously, fraction of what Burgundy would set you back… Oh yeah I don’t know of any Burgundy from 1976 that has ever tasted this good. This wine is surprisingly alive! There are hints of oxidization on the nose (it is more of a harmonious kind of oxidization like an aged Rioja white) with most of the aromas being taken up by honey, white peach and a really alluring flower that I couldn’t ever nail down. It tasted straight away much younger than 32 years old with a truly lively body that still has plenty of acidity but also a salty/briny quality that reminded me of eating well made Honey saltwater taffy. The best part about this wine (other than the facts that it is so damn cheap, relative to what it is, and drinks better than many Gruner Veltliners from 5 years ago) was that we had this wine with some uber-spicy pork tacos and the wine went to work straight away in cooling off our mouths from the adobo and still had enough fruit to play nicely with the mango salsa on the tacos. This wine is something to behold but not many of you are gonna be able to hold it since there are only seven bottles available (there would have been 9 but my wife, born in 1976, really liked the wine and you know what they say about keeping your spouse happy). The Leth is also a testament to how Gruner Veltliner can age when very well done as this wine was some 32 years ago, awesome!
Email Price: $71.49 | Regular Price: $109.99 | Best Internet: Really Unknown
Bottles Available: 7
Get the wine here
No comments yet
The comments are closed.
