A wine I collected by coincidence. Did not know too much about barolo then other than that I liked it. It’s been in my cellar for quite some time. (Like 12+ years) The wine is nice translucent ruby red. The nose is typical nebiolo: rose, plum, cherries, tabaco, leather. But o so very balanced and smooth. Silky smooth and “sweet” tanine, exact the way that add lots of quality to the wine. 100% proof of the fact that good nebiolo will turn into royal wine if you have the patiënce. Served it with venison and deer filet with truffel, a typical Piëmont combination for it, made it the highlight of the diner. Now waiting for the other years to rippen. Can’t wait. — 4 years ago
Starts sweet. Finishes smooth. Like this a lot but getting instant headaches. Maybe coincidence — 5 years ago
Good concentration, dark-fruited, a touch lactic, with a lick of wood and surprising amount of grip. I felt it was quite elegant overall, though the complexity and acidity seems a little lacking especially compared to the other Burgs on the table. Perhaps a little closed at the moment? Solid drinking, but it’s no coincidence that it was one of the last red finished during lunch. — 2 years ago
Glouglou indeed! Fresh strawberries and just the right amount of brett.
Updating because of a coincidence too fortuitous not to document/share: I just learned that my current boss/winemaker for Goldeneye was herself a harvest intern at Domaine Binner back in ‘14 and has lots of great anecdotes... — 5 years ago
The wife was pretty keen on this. DC thought the bottle looked a little suspect. He described it as a gnarly fuzziness in the wood character, although I couldn't really relate. G, who brought the bottle, rated it well. As for me, I thought it was really nice. Still young. Big and plush, yet manages to retain an elegant touch (which seems to be a common trend across vintages with this domaine's Clos Vougeot, based on tasting notes on the web). Aromas clearly influenced by oak and floral stems, dark fruit driven, very mineral with good acidity, finishes long with plenty of grip and earthy notes. Undeniably impressive, but I don't think it's a coincidence that it was the last bottle finished during dinner. — 3 years ago
Matthew Cohen
Wow. This tastes just like … a Bourgogne rouge made by William whitehead. What a coincidence.
You get that succulent sexy fruit without as much of the complexity of the better terroir. Which is what you want some nights.
Nose: earth sexy cherries. Hints of cherry liquor.
Palate: full on mid to late season cherry. Cherry liquor. Hints of cherry licorice.
Fass selections
— a year ago