Domaine Brusset is a relatively large producer in Rhone. This wine is from an appelation in Southern Rhone called Gigondas created in 1971. Unlike Northern Rhone, which employs solely Syrah. The wine would probably be a combination of Grenache, Syrah, Mourvedre, Carrigane and Cinsault. On the nose, some cherry liqueur or kirsch character popped out mixing with some earthy barnyard but the wine was not giving much. I deliberately aired the wine before tasting but still…more cherry fruit and dry berry/flower characters came out upon tasting. It has a medium to full body followed with some astringency characters like bitter lemon/tangerine. The tannin is sandy, mouth coating and immediately dried out the tongue. The finish is relatively short and leaving my mouth dry. The style is traditional and backward. I fail once again why the both WA and WS rated this wine so high (93 and 94 points respectively) in the past. (87-89 points) rated by Michael Lam of the Beverage Review.
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Domaine Brusset is a relatively large producer in Rhone. This wine is from an appelation in Southern Rhone called Gigondas created in 1971. Unlike Northern Rhone, which employs solely Syrah. The wine would probably be a combination of Grenache, Syrah, Mourvedre, Carrigane and Cinsault. On the nose, some cherry liqueur or kirsch character popped out mixing with some earthy barnyard but the wine was not giving much. I deliberately aired the wine before tasting but still…more cherry fruit and dry berry/flower characters came out upon tasting. It has a medium to full body followed with some astringency characters like bitter lemon/tangerine. The tannin is sandy, mouth coating and immediately dried out the tongue. The finish is relatively short and leaving my mouth dry. The style is traditional and backward. I fail once again why the both WA and WS rated this wine so high (93 and 94 points respectively) in the past. (87-89 points) rated by Michael Lam of the Beverage Review.
Tags: Beverage Review, Carrigane, Cinsault, Domaine Brusset, French wine, Gigondas, grenache, Mourvedre, Rhone wine, Southern Rhone, syrah, Wine Reviews, wine tasting
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The Black Rock is a true Rhone blend consisting of 76% shiraz, 14% Carignan and 10% Grenache. The first impression from the nose is the wine is rustic…sweet ripe cherry fruit, cherry stone and cherry based cough cordial, earthy and with a hint of volatile alcohol. (*** Mistake on the video: Not sherry nose but Shiraz or Syrah nose ***) The wine when tasted offered more assertive waxy cherry stone character intermixed with dry wild flowers, wild berries, game, burnt earth, smoke and black pepper. This upfront, full body and reasonably complex wine still has a film of grippy tannin and is somewhat hot and spicy. The finish is quite long with a feel of hot peppery attack. This is a marriage of new world fruit and old world rusticity? A delight to drink with wild game or a lamb roast because of it’s slightly elevated acidity as well as spiciness. I am curious to see what the 2005 has to offer in comparison but this is this is definitely my first steal of 2007. (Rating 87-89 points) by Michael Lam of the Beverage Review.
Tags: 2004 Black Rock, Black Rock wine, blended wine, Carignan, grenache, Rhone blend, Rhone wine, Shiraz, South Africa, South African wine, wine blend, wine tasting
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The 1999 Montirius from Gigondas of Southern Rhone is made up of 80% granache and 20% Mourvedre from organically farmed vines that average over 55 years of age so this wines has no Syrah or Cinsault as other Gigondas might have. The nose gave out a high indcation of the Greneach varietal…cherry liqueur, sweet black cherry, cherry cough syrup but also has many old style Sourthern Rhone characteristics, that’s much dry fruits, dry herbs, earth and tar(?). When tasted, the sweet red cherry fruits and dry herbs and flowers tastes came out along with burnt earth, incense smoke and dark chocolate. The relatively high alcohol level of 14.5% stood out which means this medium body wine do not have enough fruits, structure and depth to ‘hide’ the alcohol. The finish is fair but not particularly long. Viewers who have this wine from their cellar should drink it up now.Tags: 1999 wine vintage, Alcohol Level, Cinsault, French wine, Gigondas, granache, Montirius, Mourvedre, Rhone wine, syrah, Wine Review, wine tasting
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