René Gabriel
03, barrel sample: floral, slightly stern bouquet, cedar tones, granular aromatics, initially more red-berried, note of plum. Medium-weight palate with a well-supporting tannin-acid frame, forest fruits, lovely sweetness from the extract, still restrained, but somehow, at least for now, lacking aromatics on the finish. Therefore somewhat disappointing for its status (17/20). 04: Surprisingly dark garnet with lilac and violet highlights at the rim. The nose is currently very reductive, black cherries, rosewood notes, phenolic, surprisingly deep. On the palate, dense, complex, meaty, with plenty of fat in the tannins, rather soft acidity, ripe blackberries on the thick finish. A wine that carries a lot of fruit and may therefore soon give a lot of pleasure. (18/20). Still on a great track, the opulent body and sweetness almost recall a great Pomerol, which for the feminine 2002 vintage is no disgrace. (18/20). 12: Medium-dark with a ruby rim. Medium garnet, ruby, brightening edge. Beautiful bouquet, perfumed cassis, exotic woods, Dominican tobacco, a touch of refreshing lemon balm. Juicy palate with lots of aromatics, moving wonderfully in the blueberry register, focused finish, great, affordable and nearly mature Pauillac fun. (18/20). 14: Nebuchadnezzar bottle. Patrick Bopp (pictured above) decanted the wine directly into the carafes. Garnet with a ruby sheen, finely brightening rim on the outside. Clearly toasty bouquet, wood shavings, behind that red plum skins and cooked fruit notes that support the nose nicely. On the palate, juicy with moreish charm, you can feel a certain under-ripeness of the grapes and the wine is logically much more red-berried than the two 1998 Pauillacs that were served almost at the same time. But for those who do not crave potential and are more inclined toward actual drinking maturity, this wine gives a lot of pleasure. Not least because 15 liters divided by 60 people guaranteed a generous second helping. The standard bottles will probably be a point lower. With a fairly adjusted large-format bonus: 18/20. 15: At the château, a bottle that had been decanted the day before. I didn’t know that, so I guessed a great vintage from a dry year. I was only right about the great vintage, which is not true for many estates in this region. Next time I want to drink it, I wouldn’t decant it. (18/20). 16: In a blind tasting against Lagrange, Giscours and Talbot, it was the best.