meljones wrote:
Duncan.
The combination of Dry Creek Valley and Russian River Valley fruit adds depth and richness to the wine, while maintaining its trademark flintiness. Fermented in stainless steel, this wine is unoaked.
– 150 stores
Catty and green, but with some sweetness. Light and obviously sauvignon. To me, Fumé Blanc implies oak contact, but this isn’t. Not a problem as it’s fresh and pleasant, but I’d have bought this expecting oak.
13.50%
Hi Mel, I put the wine into your search engine, and it did not come up ? The forum phpBB software appears to need exact description as previously typed-up for recognition, Otherwise, a load of spurious references come up.
Of the wine:
This was one of my M&S bargains
Only four left .....I enjoyed for a change, the extra fullness and ripeness to the SB fruit, and therefore have made the remaining bottles, a candidate for 2010, where I believe the fruit is sufficient, and smokiness will evolve to a wine that tastes ahead of it's class. Sweetness could be interesting with Tai prawns, lemon grass, and rocket side salad with Buffalo milk cheese....Yum.
*Sweetness*, just as well fermentation was curtailed - otherwise, another stupid new world SB @ 14.5% Everyone wants dry, dried-out white wines - Duh !
Mel, You can tell from my Burgundy rouge choices that I like full and ripe fruit
I look for ripe vintages. Ok this wine is fairly simple (other than the smoke) but the ripeness could go somewhere with time.
Of the fume', I am taught from the old school and have always put this down to smoke and "Gunpowder Plot" as coined by Mr G. The fume' smokey nose is one that I search for when spending serious dosh in the Loire. This had the Fume' for £8.99 which is good. When this wine dries out a bit in 12 -18 months time.....it could fool a few mates for a ripe and proper F. Pouilly LOL
I haven't necessarily always assumed Oak for a fume'. The secret of the terrior and of the smoke revealing itself, akin to the odd charred barrel included for a whole cuvee is a mystery to most wine quaffers *
May be they char the oak paddles over the embers of Autumn prunings, and then use them for a bit of battonage ?
* Perhaps this Wino confession, and a comment from Jancis Robinson unravels the Californian Fume' Blanc as a marketing name created by Robert Mondavi:-
http://www.alastairbathgate.com/2008/08 ... lanc-2004/Foxed again.