TN: 2005 Quinta do Crasto Douro
Posted: Sat Nov 22, 2008 6:41 pm
After reading so much about the critical acclaim of Quinta do Crasto, I absolutely could not resist the urge to go out today and pick up a bottle. This wine has been rated 88 points by WS and 87 by WA, the latter noting the labelling decision to omit the Quinta reference, so it claims, because some of the fruit was sourced from outside the estate's vineyards.
I agree with the esteemed German wine critic Michael Schmidt - the contributor to that country's chapter in the annual Wine Report - that a telltale sign of an outstanding wine estate is how much care and effort goes into its basic bottlings. Certainly the great German estates of JJ Prum, Maximin Grunhaus, Fritz Haag and Gunderloch, among others, produce wonderful so-called basic wines. Usually when I go into a restaurant, I try the soup first - and if that's good, then so will be the rest.
Having said this, I am pleased to report, on my first ever tasting of a Douro red table wine, that this $20 Cdn bottling is making a very good impression. It is very open on the nose, and shows cherry liqueur/kirsch, cassis, and wood. If I were drinking this blind, I would have guessed it was from Pauillac - very close to the second wine of Ch. Grand Puy Lacoste (Lacoste-Borie). Fine deep opaque colour with a bit of black cherry at the rim. This certainly does not smell like a $20 bottle. There is I think significant tannin, I have been letting it breathe for 20 minutes in the glass and it still tastes very dry. The initial sips were astringent. The flavour is a blend of dark fruit - I am not sure which - and almost a bit peppery. I find it quite petite syrah-like. The WA critic said it was a relatively simple wine. I respectfully beg to differ, I find it quite rich, complex and surprisingly powerful.
If this is near the estate's entry level then I sure hope to experience its premium wines. I think it could do with at least 2 or 3 years more cellaring, it's still too young. If the taste was as rich as the bouquet, I would rate it excellent; as it is, the wine is very good indeed and well worth buying at its very modest price.
It is a pleasure to be finally able to toast this estate's well-deserved recent critical acclaim. And also to this forum, for its far-sightedness and advocacy. Cheers! :)
I agree with the esteemed German wine critic Michael Schmidt - the contributor to that country's chapter in the annual Wine Report - that a telltale sign of an outstanding wine estate is how much care and effort goes into its basic bottlings. Certainly the great German estates of JJ Prum, Maximin Grunhaus, Fritz Haag and Gunderloch, among others, produce wonderful so-called basic wines. Usually when I go into a restaurant, I try the soup first - and if that's good, then so will be the rest.
Having said this, I am pleased to report, on my first ever tasting of a Douro red table wine, that this $20 Cdn bottling is making a very good impression. It is very open on the nose, and shows cherry liqueur/kirsch, cassis, and wood. If I were drinking this blind, I would have guessed it was from Pauillac - very close to the second wine of Ch. Grand Puy Lacoste (Lacoste-Borie). Fine deep opaque colour with a bit of black cherry at the rim. This certainly does not smell like a $20 bottle. There is I think significant tannin, I have been letting it breathe for 20 minutes in the glass and it still tastes very dry. The initial sips were astringent. The flavour is a blend of dark fruit - I am not sure which - and almost a bit peppery. I find it quite petite syrah-like. The WA critic said it was a relatively simple wine. I respectfully beg to differ, I find it quite rich, complex and surprisingly powerful.
If this is near the estate's entry level then I sure hope to experience its premium wines. I think it could do with at least 2 or 3 years more cellaring, it's still too young. If the taste was as rich as the bouquet, I would rate it excellent; as it is, the wine is very good indeed and well worth buying at its very modest price.
It is a pleasure to be finally able to toast this estate's well-deserved recent critical acclaim. And also to this forum, for its far-sightedness and advocacy. Cheers! :)