Goosegogs wrote:
I'll talk to myself then...
Sorry mate, I didn't look in on Friday 13th - like I'm a tad busy just now, Also I'd like to, along with half a billion other folks.... 'shoot the balls off' then hung draw and quarter every gambling Merchant Banker from here to Shanghai.
Also mate, whilst this forum has 50,000 blinking members, most of them write naff all and have bizarre log in names - excluding Shezza of course. There you go, I'm off my soap box now.....Grrrrr.
OK Mr G, i'm confused by many aspects of Malborough SB... Storage ?...Change of flavour ? Racey Acidity ? Minerality ? .
Have you tried the Crossings 2007 yet ? Now I went back to an open bottle 3 days later, it had been in the fridge. The Crossings had gained more minerality, lost any caty notes, had a sweeter length, subdued, had dumped a tiny amount of greeness/stalkiness/pithiness that it hitherto had on the length.
I just dont think we know enough about these Malborough SB's - We need an SB
Malbhound whose got years of experience to describe the way and teach us how these evolve.
You said:
Any reason for this and is this commen in reds and other whites too. Or do I need my taste buds examined.Examine your taste buds Sir, but not for all wines. New Zealand is confusing if one applies the old rules ! For instance, proper Cote d'Or village wines, particularly red, open like flowers in the glass, BUT, you need loads of experience.... because if you leave them too long, they also expire in the glass, they become breathless, flat & lifeless, empty, chambreyed out. A 15 year old 1er Cru burgundy should be consumed fairly quickly, whilst a grand Cru or a Cru Classe left bank wine need time to come around.
Mr G, your post is one that invites essays, to even get close to resolving your problem. BTW....My taste buds go AWAL sometimes.
I have found expensive aged Chablis the most fickle of them all. Leave them in the glass for an hour or so in a warm room, go back to them, and they have completely expired, just teppid fairly tastless rubbish in the glass.
There is a champagne that can hold it's own in the glass for a while, oh yes, the charming Taittinger brut or the beautiful and full figured Taittinger demi sec.....but there is a serious price to pay.... I last had the 2002 which was in a Christmas and V.expensive hamper....Yum, Yum, Yum.