Duncan wrote:
I opened a bottle of this 2006 Chablis to see how it was getting on. I wish I hadn't been cautious.
Massive fruit concentration and jaw dropping acidity - not yet ready, when ready the minerals which are there will come through as a good 1er wine.
No, I was wrong.
I finished off the last one of these last night. For the minerality to be detectable, if it ever was significant ! Would have been totally dependant on the acidity in the mouth, and perhaps immaturity of the fruit in the bottle, and
not from the roots of the vine.
The fruit 12 months later was even more lifted than when enjoyed last May. This lift is a dead ringer for the 1st stage of Bret in pinot noir, and I have not experienced it with cheaper chardonnay (which just goes moldy). However I still quite liked the wine, even though..... I could have been reducing the height of an old brushwood hedgerow, by waving around a small chain saw...... from the middle flavours coming through. Then quite a big Tio Pepe note on the finish. Well .....not really Chablis now, but quite interesting.
Just shows you that claims that ordinary Chablis on the 2006 (early maturing), not Vieilles Vignes level, is unlikely to last in your personal cellars, and may evolve in an unwelcome way, and should only be bought now in July 2010 from a retailer who can confirm that they have cold storage, and that you are not buying a dusted down bottle that has been on the shelf.
Tidying up and sharpening my Chablis experience with varying amounts of bottle age, is not hard work
I shall be moving on to a few aged and fuller 1er Chablis styles fairly soon.