One of the happiest days for me is the day the mailman drops
off the Total Wine & More mailer. I quickly rifle through it glancing here
and there for particularly stellar sales or intriguing offerings. After my
quick glance, I start over with a Sharpie and begin to read through each wine
listed, circling those that I plan to purchase over the next month. Many times
my circles far outnumber what my budget can handle and I’m forced to pare down
my selections, but I keep all of the mailers I receive and put in notes on the
wines I’ve tasted. This particular gem was featured in the March/April mailer
reduced to $14.99. a 5 dollar savings. I’d read the hype surrounding the 2009
Bordeaux wines, every wine writer worth their stuff is heralding this vintage
as a truly superb year. I figured I’d snatch up some bottles, but in the back
of my mind I was skeptical. My skepticism was wrong, very wrong. This wine
pours dark red in the glass with a purplish-black core and violet bubbles/rim.
Aromas of cassis, black cherry, vanilla and spice box waft from the glass
leaving my nostrils positively buzzing with wondrous scents. The attack is
amazingly smooth, complex and balanced with intense black fruits (black
currant, blackberry and cherry), deep smoke and oak, leather, anise and coffee;
every flavor mixing effortlessly with the last in subtle harmony. The attack
merely folds into the mid-palate, shifting the focus from the flavors to
definitive textures; the mid-palate has wonderful, supple tannins that bring
just the right amount of astringency and acidity and center on the oak and
cherry flavors drawing them out and further into the finish. The finish itself
is medium in length, and as said before starts with noticeable oak and cherry
notes then adds blackberry, chalk, damp grass, charcoal and savory. All of
these flavors blend and balance each other, playing the fruits against the
earthy flavors. This is a nice medium to full bodied wine that finishes with
just an up-tick of alcohol that isn’t present in the rest of the wine thus
leaving an aftertaste of alcohol, chalk and berries.
Overall this is a very nice drinking experience. Superbly
complex, varied in flavor but at the same time balanced and exceptionally
graceful. At 15 dollars this is a great QPR and an excellent bottle to pick up
for your get together with those “snooty wine folk”. I highly recommend this
bottle for drinking now and for cellaring. If this is a “temperature test” of
the 2009 Bordeaux wines then I can’t wait to drink through a few other bottles
I picked. Truly an excellent bottle with loads of potential, a must buy.
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