This dusty old dame was opened on a lark and was the Belle of the Ball. Fruit, velvet finish with grip on the end. A really fine and easy wine. Easily in my top 10 for the year so far. It has all of the complexity to satisfy the snobbiest wine critic and the simplicity to make a novice want to become an snob. — 8 years ago
Very complex with layers of flavor. During its peak it seems to have hints some leather spice and minerals and even perhaps a grass or dirt. It is definitely not fruit forward. This is one of my favorite wine to just sit and sip. It's definitely a wine for Scotch and Brandy drinkers. It feels very rustic as in definitely not refined. It is to Wine what Grandma's comfort food would be to a great dinner. One thing I would recommend to get the fullest out of it would be decanted as much as you possible. In fact I find it best 3 days after I've opened it unless I decant. — 8 years ago
Super dark fruit profile. Oak is definitely present. Like my Grenache a little more light on its feet, and with some acid. Obviously a quality wine, but not made in the style that hits me where it should. On day three took on some curious umami-soy-liquid aminos on the nose. Slightly oxidized, but actually showed some real depth and complexity. Maybe this is just a lay down for 10 kind of wine. — 7 years ago
At first all new oak and hot alcohol. Like canilla vodka. With a three hour plus decant...what a wine this is. Modern on its stunning power, massive black pepper, chewy tannin, dried cherry and raspberry, slight bread quality. Vanilla and menthol on the finish. Not subtle, but spellbinding and a nice value. — 7 years ago
Meaty on the nose, limestone, purple flowers. Cherry jam. Tongue-stripping tannins and garrigue in the mouth. Herbaceous and funky. Very mineral driven. A good compromise between pleasure and seriousness. — 8 years ago
Intense dark red fruit with a lot of earthiness and spice. Full bodied with a long smooth finish. Easy drinking to the last drop. — 9 years ago
Terra Alta has proven one of my favorite regions for white wine that nearly nobody knows about. Lafou makes one of the best - a Garnatxa Blanca of length and texture. Sweaty and mineral, the wine offers precise, clean flavors or green olive skin, almond dust, lemon pith, and Thai basil - corrupted further with tones of petrol, dried wax, rind, and salinity. What a wine. — 7 years ago
An order of Carthusian monks first found their way to Scala Dei in 1194 at the invitation of Alfonso I. The name "Scala Dei" means "stairway to heaven," and a visit through these transportive ruins remains a critical first stop if ever visiting the region. While monks no longer work the cellars, the Scala Dei wines remain solid - and often a relative value in comparison to those who've arrived in the last half century. Prior is Scala Dei's mid-tier of their three Priorat reds. High octane flavors of licorice, pepper, black plum, violet, and blueberry find balance with spicier, more elegant tones of sandalwood, rosewater, frankincense and gingerbread. While 15% abv, you’d never know per the bright acidity and chalky tannins - yet there remains, a warming medieval intrigue that conjures romantic images of hearthstones and velvet. A nice showing from Priorat’s pioneering monastery. — 7 years ago
Gobindjit S. Dhaliwal
Elegant and extremely perfumed, a nice juicy red fruit core featuring ripe cherries, raspberries, and strawberries, followed by dried lavender, meaty beef jus, orange peel, undergrowth, sweet tobacco, charcoal, and intense black pepper. Delicious sweet red fruit flavors on entry with some dried apricots that lead to a umami rich midpalate filled with meaty notes, iron, and a slightly saline minerality that intermingles with intense peppery notes that linger for some time. Incredible silky mouth feel on this midbodied red, very light in structure but intense in flavors. — 6 years ago