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glad lady VM liked it!!! as soon as i brought it out, otis i believe called me a dog or some such other to indicate that i'd stacked the deck  i would tend to agree that the tannic structure of this wine indicates a lengthly maturation period. i decanted for an hour at home, then reopened at VMs and we finally sipped after another half hour i'd say. this could, and it's been said by latour and others, use more time. wow, what a mouthful, full throughout the palate, a finish that lasts and lasts, and as otis said, a seminal wine! my impression is that, even with the fruit base of this wine, the tannins are still in control. i should have decanted longer but didn't have the time. i have one more and will not touch for at least 2010. i'll try to remember dain's comment and see if it's long lived or not.
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| Posts: 1348 | Location: Burr Ridge, IL | Registered: Mar 26, 2002 |    |
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It's wines like this that should put California vintners to shame for charging over $100 for wines not as good as this $55 one. There is also Beausejour Becot and Troplong Mondot that fit the same bill.
When is California going to wake up and smell the coffee?
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Whoooaaa there R2.... My tanno meter never registers favorably without some fruit in the fruit-o meter!  Anyway....Sounds like you Illinois boys are up to no good! I think the west coast crew is going to show you guys up this weekend! Sunday is shaping up for an interesting wine tasting event..... Just thought I'd stoke the fire!  Great notes on the '98 Monbousquet by the way! Thanks!  -DRAB So much wine.....so little time!!!
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| Posts: 5970 | Location: San Francisco | Registered: Jun 20, 2002 |    |
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Just for fun I thought I would go fetch this from another board where I posted it a while back. This was originally posted on the Squires board, then to Tanzer, and since we are on the subject, now here.
There are a few comments on Monbousquet and Lafite on a different thread on this board so I thought I would copy this here. I posted this on a different board and while there may be some etiquete (sp?) questions about posting twice I thought it might be useful here.
So much recent discussion of the Perse wines I thought it might be instructive to open a few and report (in the interest of science of course) my tasting notes. I'll start with the 98 Monbousquet, hereafter referred to as "the big M". I will try the 99 M and perhaps the 98 and 99 Pavie sometime soon. I opened the wine about 5:05 pm CST and let it set in the decanter until I began cooking dinner (5:30). I followed the development of the wine over the course of about 5 hours. First a few caveats...I can see why this wine is controversial...started quite a controversy at our house. My wife (aka she with the better nose and palate..see previous threads) declared..."this is thick...medicinal..cough syrup... please go down to the cellar and get me a nice burgundy...now...this might be good with raw meat...are you planning to cook the steaks?".
Oh well...different palates are a good thing, I like burgundy too but on to the Monbousquet. Initially I thought the wine was..get this..austere and closed on the nose..first sip was very dry and tasted like bitter chocolate and coffee, amazingly dense in texture..ok..back away from the decanter and come back in a bit. About an hour later...wine has opened on the nose and presents a fruity, even grapey aroma. On the palate it has become sweeter and more and more fruit on the palate to go with the coffee and chocolate. Later...more fruit development in the mouth..layers of different dark fruit and I am beginning to see the "chocolate plum pudding" thing..thicker than many ports. A bit later..even more layers, different fruits..a bit of black raspberry and blueberry and even...and this has been perplexing me all night...a very distinct and interesting flavor of sugared peaches. This is a fruit atomic bomb. This wine is huge, it is very ripe, it is full of oak and extract. IMHO it all fits togather very well and I really liked it. That being said, it is a meal by itself practically and some may prefer a nice burgundy with their steak...just ask Cathy. All the best and happy Thanksgiving to all, Dain
I have been told, this is 'Not your Father's bordeaux' and I would agree. It is different, perhaps the 1947 Cheval blanc tasted like this young, I sure don't know. If you do not get fruit from this wine, you need to let it decant MUCH longer. Takes awhile, at least it did a year ago. Maybe I need to open another one!!!!!!!!!
Dain
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| Posts: 190 | Location: Ozark Mountains/SanFrancisco | Registered: Feb 02, 2003 |    |
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otis: it was great tasting with you and all the other forumites. altho you and i did take that first sip before the others realised what the game was dain: thanks for the notes on your tasting. from the sounds of it, it definitely develops complexity with time out of the bottle. not dumb stage by any means, but if i for some reason forget my head and open this in the next couple of years i'll be sure to decant thoroughly!
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| Posts: 1348 | Location: Burr Ridge, IL | Registered: Mar 26, 2002 |    |
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