Goosegogs wrote:
I have the Larousse Encyclopedia of Wine.
It's a big book about wine.
It's brought me hours of relief. I pretend to read it every time the wife wants to talk.
So who's a naughty boy then, that's the sort of stuff that gets me into very hot water.
Well, after 35 well spent quaffing years, I invariably get the obligatory pocket book on the most recent world wide vintages for a birthday or Christmas. I'm not complaining, since the advent of computers, the editors do a great job in changing a bit of the info year on year
.
I must have at least a dozen or more diff publications.
Guide Hachette is good - but you need to get out the French / English dictionary.
David Peppercorn's Wines of Bordeaux was a stalwart in prior decades, every property had a detailed write up of the cuvee' . Now consortiums keep buying up properties and changing things. For instance GK's Cambon la Pelouse
was a property, owned by energetic growers from St-Emilion who made wine that developed quickly, and no casks were used in maturation, it was a good example and how clean and fresh and fruity such a Haut-Medoc can be - He says. But according to GK, it appears that the wine is heavily oaked by a bunch of "Vin du Guarde" investors, who are trying to jump price positioning. I haven't tried the 2005 Cambon, but '05 was tannic, so adding all that oak in maturation may have spoilt the wine.
Cru bourgeois claret was supposed to be enjoyed with pleasure. There is a lot of messing about by investors, which can take natural and subtle beauty away.
The biggest and most heavy is Jancis and Hugh's sixth World Wine Atlas, a great coffee table book, with beautiful photography on fab paper quality. Actually Jancis's writing and opinion of the Cote d'Or wines is excellent, and of the wines I could afford, or have had the pleasure to taste in the past, I agree with her opinion and description.
I leaf through or look up stuff, usually late into the evening, when the Misses has already gone up, or I check out before buying, and doing a few Web checks - the web can be pretty innaccurate when assessing an expensive wine. Many people give a tasting note, before the wine is ready. Some folks just don't analyse the wine correctly.
Such is life