FRIDAT NIGHT COINCIDENCES
In the meanwhile Bob Browne had brought a 1988 Ch Phelan Segur, another Bordeaux from St Estephe, and this allowed yet another serendipitous horizontal comparison for that vintage. Again, it showed more robust than the Baron Phillipe.
The most surprising tasting of the night however, was another bottle I contributed, and it came at the very end of as the 8th bottle. This was a dark wine with a distinctly vegetative, celery-like, Bloody Mary nose. In general such strong vegetative qualities in the nose portend a bad experience in the palate. Not so with this one. It was fruity, soft, complex and well balanced. Everyone guessed it as a Right Bank Bordeaux (Pomerol or St Emillion). Many noted that this was “the best Bordeaux of the night”.
Guess what? The wine was a 1994 Mont St John (photo below), a little known winery at the easternmost end of Carneros. My friend Archie Steele and I used to frequent it in the mid 1990’s until it got discovered by tourist buses and we were elbowed out. The wines we bought from them, mostly Cabarnets, have uniformly been bad experiences in wine group. I had quit presenting them years ago, and added this bottle to the line-up with much trepidation. Imagine my surprise when this 1994 finally matured into something that rivalled the other, more respected French labels.
Delightful surprises such as these are part of the fun of shared wine experiences. The only way to keep everyone honest is to taste them blind and have opinions expressed without any label or price bias. I am quite sure the Mont St. John would not have gotten such good reviews if the group knew what it was ahead of time.
On we go with the endless journey of exploring the wine world, certain that more such pleasures await us in the future.