Craig Winchell wrote:So there you have it. I can make good wine, but I can't do better, only different. Perhaps I should get a job with Royal- If you can't beat them, join them (and if there are any Royal folk out there, I'm serious). Really, my hat's off to them. A real pleasure.
Elie Poltorak wrote:...as this year (at least as the wines were showing in NY) was weaker than the past couple years, with few new and exciting offerings. But your general sentiment is certainly correct: The kosher wine world has matured and we have a great array of top-quality CS, merlot, CF, Syrah/Shiraz, SB, and chardonnay. What we sorely lack are the other varietals. You rightly mention PN, but a decent kosher, dry Riesling is even harder to find.
Craig Winchell wrote:I went to both the trade and consumer tastings. It was quite sobering. This was the first year I felt irrelevant in the kosher wine world. Royal now has a stable of top quality reds, and their higher end Chards have real character. Of the wines I tasted, there was little even remotely bad by any standard, among the main tables, with the possible exception of the Pacifica wines and Goose Bay regular Pinot (which were not bad in a winemaking sense, but rather totally unexciting and wimpy), and much of the French, and there was quite a bit to like or love. Mind you, I stayed away from entry level wines, for the most part. Even the Goose Bay reserve Pinot had decent character, and their Sauvignon/Fume Blancs were both quite good. For me, the winners were clearly the higher end Herzog Cabs, from various vintages, which gave a good indication of how that style sorts itself out over a period of a few years. They were nicely structured wines upon which I could not have improved.
I started out withthe 4 Champagnes- 2 from Drappier, 2 from Laurent Perrier. Quality on all counts. My favorite was the white label Laurent Perrier nonvintage. Then I went to French, Bordeaux, of various vintages. This, in my opinion, was one of the weakest tables, but I would have expected it. The Bordeaux were all right, the Burgundy inferior, the Rhone meh. Then the Herzogs, and the beginnings of the quality night for reds, a detour to the fairly mediocre Pacifica and better Goose Bay, then an afternoon and evening of totally solid reds from Israel. I would say Pinot is the one weak link in the kosher lineup, but in the dedicated kosher wineries, they seem to have everything else down pat.
So there you have it. I can make good wine, but I can't do better, only different. Perhaps I should get a job with Royal- If you can't beat them, join them (and if there are any Royal folk out there, I'm serious). Really, my hat's off to them. A real pleasure.
David Raccah wrote:Hey Bill - did you taste the 2010 PN and the Cuvee D? What did you think of them?
David Raccah wrote:Hey has anyone had the weird experience of tasting the 2010 Yatir Sauvignon Blanc and smelling cheese - real cheese! Not on the mouth, but the nose is weird!
David Raccah wrote:Also, in case I said I loved the 2010 Shiloh Chard more than or equal to the Castel C, I meant the 2011 Shiloh Card.
Joshua London wrote:Elie Poltorak wrote:...as this year (at least as the wines were showing in NY) was weaker than the past couple years, with few new and exciting offerings. But your general sentiment is certainly correct: The kosher wine world has matured and we have a great array of top-quality CS, merlot, CF, Syrah/Shiraz, SB, and chardonnay. What we sorely lack are the other varietals. You rightly mention PN, but a decent kosher, dry Riesling is even harder to find.
Hi Elie,
Why "weaker"? Agreed that there were fewer "new" offerings, and I guess "exciting" is a relative term, but I actually thought it a fairly strong showing. Not sure I'd argue the point too strongly, but I thought many of the wines that were the same vintages as previously available were drinking better than before. As for decent kosher dry Riesling, did you try the new Hagafen offering? Not sure what your expectations are for "decent", but I thought it was great, even exciting.
All best,
Josh
Return to Israeli and Kosher Wine Forum
Users browsing this forum: Steven B and 5 guests