René Gabriel
From the very beginning of my notes, it has always scored between 19/20 and 20/20 points. Now that it has reached its first drinking plateau and has repeatedly delivered an intoxicating, delicate Sauternes experience, I grant it the title of “wine of the century”. Not least because 80 lucky millennium New Year’s Eve guests, whom we had the pleasure of hosting at the Hotel Monopol in Lucerne, can attest to this perfect score in the form of a gigantic Impériale bottle.
Tasting impressions around 1990: nutty, toasty bouquet. On the palate, nut aromas again, a marked yet finely articulated tannic structure, covered by richness and creamy texture; full, fat finale with good balance. A beautiful harmony makes this wine the d’Yquem one appreciates and loves.
1995, drunk from a half bottle at Paul Kunz in Meisterschwanden: a unique experience! The small bottle shows how great this wine will one day become. The little voice tipping the scales had long been asking me whether I shouldn’t upgrade this wine. Now the time has come: 20/20 points! With regular bottles, I would definitely wait longer. In the meantime, drink the 75 or 37 until the 83 is ready!
02: Enjoyed with dessert at Bruno Meneghin’s birthday in Basel: even the nose was a true Sauternes explosion; peppery orange play. On the palate, sheer perfection. I assume there have been only very rare “century” Yquems that revealed themselves so “vulgarly” already in youth.
03: Semester tasting in Zurich: maturing gold-orange; brilliant. Delicate, extremely fine-boned bouquet; peppery and elegant with a perfumed sweetness of orange blossom, kumquats, honey and lemon balm. On the palate a dancing, grand, graceful experience; intense, a fine dryness, almond flour—so fresh, so elegant. Lafaurie actually has more fat, but in the end it’s class that counts! 20/20.
In Vienna in April 06, to close a great Haut-Brion dinner at the Coburg. Simply brilliant and perfect.
08: A magnum from Martin Stoevesandt’s cellar after a wonderful dinner (with a brilliant duck…) and many vintages of Cheval Blanc at the restaurant les Quatre Saisons in Basel. Simply perfect!!! (20/20).
12: Dark gold-orange, shimmering brilliantly. Right from the start it shows an insane bouquet: bitter orange, Turkish delight, Cointreau. On the palate with great pedigree, dramatic concentration, orange pulp, candied fruits; in the finely peppery freshness it even shows mandarins, and again orange liqueur, echoing endlessly. Among the truly great, legendary Yquems. (20/20).
16: Unfortunately a bottle with a very slight, nasty cork taint!
17: A little half bottle at Kurt and Marlis Steger’s. Extremely sweet and—thankfully—showing an extremely elegant, fine supporting acidity within. Somehow more Tokaji than Sauternes. But still brilliant. (20/20).
17: Magnum. Beautifully glowing golden. The bouquet is dreamy, showing an intense, gently dry sweetness that underscores the enormous concentration. It smells of dried figs, raisins, Bual Madeira, dried apricots and candied honey. A crazy sweet parade! On the palate it comes with tremendous intensity; a true nectar that seems almost over-concentrated, then gradually releases aromas minute by minute. It also gives the impression of a gigantic Beerenauslese. Which it—technically speaking—exactly is. A still-young Yquem legend with an immortal future. (20/20).
18: Unfortunately a slightly corked magnum at a rarities tasting on Sylt.
19: Magnum. For an almost 40-year-old Sauternes, it shows exactly the right colour: ochre gold with orange reflections. The nose delivers caramelised orange peel, bitter orange marmalade, Grand Marnier and a wonderful ration of nougat. On the palate complex and complete. The massively concentrated extract shows a noble bitterness on the tongue that brings spice and pedigree. The finish is bombastic and immensely long. Brilliant today—and for another 50 years. At least. In magnum anyway. (20/20).