1989 BORDEAUX STILL ON AN ENJOYABLE DRINKING PLATEAU AT 35

Your scribe has been closely monitoring the 1989 Bordeaux wines since the early days in barrel. Always enjoyed their rich opulent character with higher pHs but lower acidities and silky tannins that made them accessible right out of the gate. Fortunate to have purchased bottles of a couple of the great aging superstars from Pessac-Leognan being Haut-Brion & La Mission Haut-Brion. The 1989s generally have developed well in bottle and have been written up on this Blog several times before on February 24, 2014 at 25 here, February 22, 2016 compared to 1990 here, and September 30, 2019 at 30 here.

On September 24, 2024 the Vancouver Branch of Commanderie de Bordeaux held a dinner-tasting at Blue Water Cafe of some 1989 Bordeaux at 35 years of age. Unfortunately, your scribe missed the event being at some conflicting wine & food events in Nantucket and Boston. However, several members of our Group of Eight (Ian Mottershead, David Kester, Nick Wright, Larry Burr, and Alvin Nirenberg) attended and kindly sent me emails on their impressions so I have inserted some quotes from them in this update.

Started with two aged white Bordeaux:

2014 CHATEAU LA GARDE BLANC: Old Eschenauer exclusive and since 1990 with Dourthe of mostly 85% Sauvignon Blanc floral and 15% Semillon roundness combining for light refreshing flavours at 13 abv

2015 CHATEAU DE FIEUZAL BLANC: Richer more concentrated vintage than 2014 plus more complexity from higher blend of Semillon at 45% with SB 55% but also at 13 abv. Written up on August 8, 2022 here.

First flight of reds:

1989 CHATEAU L’ARROSEE: Old fav of your scribe referred to in Ask Sid feature on April 10, 2024 here. David Kester held a blind tasting vertical of this St. Emilion property in 2011. Nick Wright found “Punching well above its weight class, superb value, with higher Cab content giving it a slightly leaner/tighter style, a lovely mix of Right & Left Bank characteristics.”

1989 CHATEAU LA CONSEILLANTE: Pomerol 80 Merlot & 20 Cab Franc full bodied concentration in this 1989 vintage. Divided opinions as some loved it while others didn’t. Larry Burr thought “Opening beautifully into ripe dark fruits, a bit of coffee, and Best of the Flight.” Nick said: “Unique intensity of black fruits, cedar, and tobacco on the nose with a superb long finish, very captivating and his Wine Of The Night!” The 1982 tasted recently is also outstanding (as is 1990).

1989 CHATEAU LA FLEUR DE GAY: Another Pomerol of 100% old vines Merlot. Highly rated early on by Parker but found one dimensional by me back in 2014 tasting referred to above and this time shows “stewed” by Ian Mottershead and “slightly muddy, ordinary, undistinguised” by Larry. Lowest rated of the nine 1989 wines.

1989 CHATEAU CHEVAL BLANC: Top St. Emilion property with unique blend of about 60 Cab Franc & 40 Merlot. Disappointing again with “bottle variation rampant” by David and Larry “old muted no complexity”, Ian had to “coax a modest nose” and Nick “not as intense as La Conseillante”. Our outstanding CBx Cellarmaster Alvin Nirenberg has organized a tasting for next year of 1990s at 35 and this twin vintage to 1989 should be singing brilliantly for Cheval Blanc.

Second flight: All agreed that this was a better wonderful flight.

1989 CHATEAU PALMER: Glorious Margaux. One bottle was corked but others showed delicious and seductive as usual. Tried 1989 & 1983 together last year and both were outstanding. Nick said: “Very classy classic beautifully crafted of medium body stylish lovely balance.” Ian found “in good shape” and David’s “favourite bouquet of all”.

1989 CHATEAU LEOVILLE LAS CASES: St. Julien star but stylish lighter elegance – not the depth of 1990 and other top vintages. Both Alvin & Larry found an “iron” element more like “Leoville Barton”. Still has a lot of grace but 3 great wines in second flight outshone this vintage.

1989 CHATEAU LYNCH-BAGES: First of two finishing Pauillacs. “Great year for L-B” says Ian. Round powerful minty sweet cedary young fruit with finesse on previous tries. Shows that terroir of “intense black currants, long complex finish still with good acidity and balance” says Nick. Larry found “dense entry full body long finish – rich and young.” Probably continue to develop greatness.

1989 CHATEAU MOUTON ROTHSCHILD: First Growth is better than in 1990 and has been surprising with improvement in bottle. Blend of 78CS/14CF/8M using heavily toasted barrels and artsy label of Georg Baselitz. Nick’s second wine of the night “intense bouquet of cassis and mint”. Both David “superior” and Alvin “favourite” preferred. Ian thought “a step up from L-B with a little more finesse, exoticism, and something special – no rush.” Larry said “lighter, mature, elegant compared to bigger young rich L-B.”

1989 CHATEAU D’YQUEM: Classy Sauternes in middle of the trilogy of acidity balance 1988 and powerful 1990. Rich and complex. Larry “mid-gold colour and lucious”. Ian: “excellent but not WOTN in tough competition but the creme brulee is very much to my taste.”

What an enchanting evening with an interesting 1989 horizontal.  Everyone over the moon about Blue Water’s quality menu and perfect wine matching.

Wish I had been there!

You might also like:

Ask Sid: What is Harslevelu?

Ask your question here

Question: What is Harslevelu?

Answer: An important grape (along with Furmint) with a long history used in the Tokaj region of Hungary mostly for prized sweet wines but they are slower selling. More recently we are seeing a pivot for use also in quality terroir driven (on volcanic soils) drier style wines some blended with Furmint. Check out the old vines of Attila Homonna and other top producers for their emerging special balanced dry wines.

You might also like:

ESTIATORIO MILOS RESTAURANTS DO EXTRAORDINARY QUALITY VALUE

In last week’s Blog on the frustrating Resy Reservation system in New York your scribe referenced seven places that really showed excellent dining at competitive pricing. Among those mentioned was Milos at Hudson Yards.

However, reflecting back on my remarkable recent experiences at Milos in several locations it seemed appropriate to me to provide more details and feature them solely here.

Interesting that the first estiatorio Milos was Montreal founded in 1979 and are now around the world including Athens, Dubai, London, Las Vegas, Los Cabos, Miami, New York City (Hudson Yards, Midtown, & Milos Wine Bar), Palm Beach (opening soon), Singapore, and Toronto. Wish they would expand to your scribe’s hometown of Vancouver!

On their website they state that “we believe in philoxenia, the art of Greek hospitality, gathering at a table to share a meal.” Boy do they ever deliver this wonderful tradition of sharing in spades.

Always blown away by the quality of the ingredients they use. Fresh delicious seafood is simply prepared (difficult to achieve) but outstandingly cooked to perfection and so delicious showing their natural flavours. Even their olive oil comes from very old Koroneiki trees hand picked and using the first cold press. The bottle served to us was My Sister’s Extra Virgin Olive Oil from Greece with a best before date of July 29, 2025. So fresh.

Milos is my enthusiastic nomination for The Best Weekday Value Lunch of 3 fine courses at only $45. The three courses allow you to make choices in each section. We took first the impressive grilled Octopus followed by the spectacular Whole Grilled Fish Of The Day (this time Dorade), and finished with the spiced walnut cake with honey lavender ice cream. Admire their reasonably priced mostly Greek wines by the glass with balanced Assyrtiko blend whites matching well with the food. The friendly accommodating serving staff add to making your lunch so memorable.

Highly recommend seeking out Milos for an amazing weekday lunch at one of his many locations. So well done and also a very good deal!

You might also like:

Ask Sid: Which wine region has a surprising weather shift?

Ask your question here

Question: There are so many extreme weather shifts occurring in the wine regions around the world. Which place for you is experiencing the most surprising climate change?

Answer: Yes the weather seems to have shifted in many grape growing regions that produce wine. So many are being affected by more extremes from cold frost hail and flooding heavy rains to drought conditions including extreme heat, fire smoke, mildew, and other fungal diseases. Hard to pick just one region but perhaps South Africa qualifies as a big surprise. Cape Town a region with a history of water restrictions has recently been experiencing severe winter storms and heavy rains with record flooding. There was even snow falling last month in Franschhoek. They are coping well so far but believe the climate extremes there is something to closely monitor – as are most wine growing regions around the world.

You might also like:

NEW YORK RESTAURANT RESERVATIONS: EITHER EASY OR DIFFICULT?

Planning to go to a restaurant somewhere in the world often requires making a reservation ahead of time. Usually the procedure is straight forward by either making a phone call or now more frequently booking on line. You may have difficulty in getting a confirmation for the time requested but at least you maintain the control and know how things stand. However, in New York City the hospitality platform of RESY (An American Express Company) has taken over management of most top restaurants spots for this system – maybe uniquely so around the globe. The intention was for helping restaurants control reservations with improved efficiency. In most cases it seems to be working well with excellent customer service for booking times on line for inside, outside, and even bar/counters dining at select 15 minute intervals. It also helps the restaurants with their management calculations on table turnover and maximum capacity in an organized orderly manner rather than just manually as before.

However, for the most popular in demand places Resy is not working. Your scribe tried unsuccessfully many times recently to book restaurants such as Via Carota, Don Angie, Penny and Shukette. It always comes up to request “Notify Me” but they never do. Instead to get in it is necessary to just show up and grab one of the reserved for walk-in openings immediately or wait. Better odds if you show up for dinner at 4-5 pm early or after 9 pm late to increase your chances. This strategy worked for me. Resy needs to have another look IMHO at this glitch in their reservation situation. Impossible to book so many.

That being said the dining in NY is still stellar with these 7 tried this month and all recommended by me:

VIA CAROTA: Italian so popular fun casual in Greenwich Village but impossible to book. Still outstanding $28 Polipo – grilled octopus & green olive pesto.

DON ANGIE: Another Italian spot in same West Village area but never available on Resy. Fantastic signature dish of pinwheel lasagna for two at $68. Broccoli Di Ciccio $14 with black garlic & hazelnuts a good side item. Best value $85 on Wine List is elegant cherries of lovely aged 2014 Barbera d’Asti Nuj Suj by Icardi.

SARABETH’S: Upper West Side (other locations too) VALUE of Prix Fixe $45 Three Course Menu of quality appetizer large Caesar Salad with 5 lettuces including kale and shaved crisp parmesan. Mains of Salmon & Chicken are well done, and delicious dark chocolate dessert. Amazing deal on Wednesdays with a few wines available on lost leader price. Enjoyed a bottle of 2021 pure fresh Chablis AC Dom. de Vauroux at the steal price of $30.

LA PECORA BIANCA: All day Italian VALUE dining several NY locations easily reserved. Outstanding recipe for whole Branzino with spinach, olives, and Meyer lemon for $34 and all pastas are excellent – Calamarata $24 with arugula pesto is so tasty. Lots of wines by the glass including fruit loaded 2022 Barbera d’ Alba from Vajra.

ESTIATORIO MILOS: Returned to this fav again at Hudson Yards. Also enjoy their Las Vegas location. They always do a superb $45 great value lunch including fresh fish of the day together with other Greek goodies. A deal.

SHUKETTE: Middle East cuisine place busy at Ninth Avenue at 25th Street. Wonderful breads like Frena for flavourful dips of Hummus, Labneh, and similar. Spanish 2022 Albarino Pazo das Bruxas $16 by the glass. Hot spot.

PENNY: Fortunate to find one of their only 31 all counter seating as a walk-in at this outstanding small newer restaurant. Impressive innovative seafood! Really enjoyed Octopus + Potato Salad $18, Grilled Mackerel + Long Hots $24, Swordfish + Jimmy Nardellos $35, and freshly baked warm sesame Brioche $8. Unique Wine List well assembled with hard to find labels including some great Alsace whites. Explore. A treat.


You might also like: