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WTN: Dr. L Riesling 2004

PostPosted: Fri Mar 24, 2006 11:15 am
by Bruce Hayes
MSR. From the Loosen Brothers.

Incredibly fresh and vibrant nose with lemon, lime and spice.

The first moutful was so rich and intense it was almost painful!! Spritzy, fleshy lemon-lime, zippy acidity, sweet, brown sugar. With time the wine becomes very lime dominant, with a moderately long mouthwatering finish.

This wine kicks butt.

Screwcap closure. Good deal at $13.95 Canadian.

Re: TN: Dr. L Riesling 2004

PostPosted: Fri Mar 24, 2006 11:17 am
by Bill Buitenhuys
Nice little quaffer isnt it, Bruce? I can't wait for it to warm up around here so I can enjoy this one on the back deck.

Re: TN: Dr. L Riesling 2004

PostPosted: Fri Mar 24, 2006 11:26 am
by Bruce Hayes
Have always felt that "cheap" but good German Rieslings were just made for hot and humid Canadian summers!!

A nice citrus-drive SB also goes down a treat.

Re: TN: Dr. L Riesling 2004

PostPosted: Fri Mar 24, 2006 1:19 pm
by wnissen
Bruce,

This is one of my consistent favorites. Even the 2003 was light and pretty, and the 2002 better than that. It's US$10-11 around here, and a superb value. I also like the Saint M from the Pfalz for a few dollars less. For a negociant wine, you can't beat the value offered by Loosen.

Walt

Re: TN: Dr. L Riesling 2004

PostPosted: Fri Mar 24, 2006 2:11 pm
by Paul B.
Bruce, I agree with you on Sauvignon Blanc. Our Ontario versions such as Cave Spring's are amazing on a hot summer's day. The best thing I like about them is that they're grassy, citrusy and always a '0' on the sugar scale. Rieslings in Ontario very often get at least 1 degree of sugar snuck into them and still get called "dry".

Re: TN: Dr. L Riesling 2004

PostPosted: Fri Mar 24, 2006 2:32 pm
by Sue Courtney
Bruce Hayes wrote:MSR. From the Loosen Brothers.

Incredibly fresh and vibrant nose with lemon, lime and spice.

The first moutful was so rich and intense it was almost painful!! Spritzy, fleshy lemon-lime, zippy acidity, sweet, brown sugar. With time the wine becomes very lime dominant, with a moderately long mouthwatering finish.

This wine kicks butt.

Screwcap closure. Good deal at $13.95 Canadian.


Bruce,
You forgot to mention one very important thing - just 8.5% alcohol by volume. I bought some bottles for the down under summer for about NZ $17.95 each, which is great buying for this style of wine in NZ and you can drink it straight from the fridge.

How does my note compare?

Very pale in colour. Aromatic and slightly oily smelling with citrus, stewed apple and a lime blossom overtone to the scent. Crisp and fresh in the palate with bright acidity, an earthy mid-palate and a rose petal-infused boiled lolly sweetness to the finish. A piercing wine with beautifully balanced sweetness and acidity, and an amazingly long juicy finish for its low alcohol content.

Cheers,
Sue

Re: TN: Dr. L Riesling 2004

PostPosted: Fri Mar 24, 2006 2:52 pm
by Bruce Hayes
Nice note Sue. Pardon my drooling. :oops:

Saint M

PostPosted: Sat Mar 25, 2006 7:48 am
by Redwinger
wnissen wrote:Bruce,

I also like the Saint M from the Pfalz...
Walt


Me too. I found both the 2003 and 2004 Saint Ms to be very emjoyable quaffs.

Redwinger

Re: Saint M

PostPosted: Tue Jul 25, 2006 7:39 am
by Bob Parsons Alberta
So here is my take on the `04 Dr L tasting saga!! This has to be the third bottle tasted I think and was opened for some ladies who kindly helped me with a butterfly count in the local fens yesterday afternoon. So some varied comments but all relevant none-the-less.

WTN: `04 Dr L Riesling, M-S-R.

Low alcohol, screwcap. Served nicely chilled as can be fat if served too warm.

Colour. Pale straw w. greenish hints.

Nose. We had comments ranging from apple to citrus, minerals, lemon, pears and floral, hint of diesel (I asked them to look for this).

Palate. We all agreed this was a very nice wine and a good intro to Germany. With 33 degrees, it was a nice quaff!!! I found it crisp and refreshing, nice tartness and a lingering aftertaste. Sure its not elegant, but good in its own right. Some honeyed tones here amidst apple and melon. Very clean and tangy, more medium bodied than the lighter `05.
Sam, we looked for bacon but no luck!!

So there we are forumites. The tasters were not pros but really enjoyed the wine. Few will seek out for sure, also the Cedar Creek Pinot Gris which we opened at the same time. Yup, they liked that too.

Re: Saint M

PostPosted: Tue Jul 25, 2006 8:45 am
by Ian Sutton
Bob
How are the flutter-bys doing? I understand ours are struggling currently as there's less of their preferred flowers around. Might have to start planting some for them!
regards
Ian

Re: Saint M

PostPosted: Tue Jul 25, 2006 11:51 am
by Sam Platt
Bob Parsons wrote:Sam, we looked for bacon but no luck!!


Bob, My wife didn't spot the bacon either. It seemed quite clear to me at the time, but my palate may have been out of synch.

I'm glad that your panel enjoyed the Dr. L. It's an enjoyable sipper as it was intended to be. We continue to drain about one bottle of the '04 per week. If the weather stays hot we are likely to continue on that pace.