Showing posts with label Frapin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Frapin. Show all posts

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Whisky Live New York 4/11/12

My first Whisky Live. Sadly I had to work late and arrived, frazzled, after 8. I was immediately soothed. Even though I was barely able to cover 1/3 of the floor I had peak experiences, fascinating conversations and drank plenty of amazing and exciting whisky and cognac. Here are the highlights:
Killer Frapin Cognacs

Larry Neuringer of Palm Bay
Frapin Cognac. My first sight on walking into the room was Frapin Cognac. All my favorites were on display and then two high end offerings, the VIP XO, and the Extra Grand Champagne, that I had been dreaming of trying - but never would have dreamed would be there. The VIP XO amped up the strengths of the Chateau Fontpinot XO with an even more effusive floral nose, august noble midpalate bursting with crystalized bitter orange, jasmine blooms, leather and rancio, and a long killer finish with walnut skins, luxury oak and bliss. The Extra Grand Champagne (top of the line except for the crazy kilobuck crystal decanter job) has been a dream tasting of mine ever since Paul Pacult put it in the 2011 hall of fame - see #5 on the page: http://www.spiritjournal.com/tastenote.htm Well - blow me down, Larry Neuringer of Frapin's US distributer, Palm Bay International generously poured me one.  It was sublime - taking the VIP XO's flavor profile even further into the stratosphere.  I took a 3cl sample so I'll be doing a full review in the weeks to come.  5cl samples are going for $80 on Ebay, so this actually just about paid for the event cost right there in the first 10 minutes!  I was LOVING IT.

Bastille 1789 Cognac Malt Whisky
Palm Bay also distributes an exciting new barley malt and wheat whisky from Cognac called Bastille 1789.  Distilled in alembic stills in the Cognac fashion and then aged in casks made from French Limousine oak, cherry and acacia woods, the flavor profile is startling different.  The nose is spiced with South Asian notes of curry, paprika, maybe some ginger.  The entry is unexpectedly sweet, then followed by a lean and drying midpalate that is elegant and refined and an unexpected sweet and herbal effusion of woods on the finish.  I took a sample of this as well and am excited to write a full critical review of this as well in the weeks to come.


Al Young + Four Roses 2012 Single Cask
Four Roses' Al Young was there pouring the astonishing new Four Roses 2012 Single Cask.  This is the higher corn mashbill recipe OESK, 52.5% abv.  The nose was rich and huge and refined with a profusion of floral notes and big fruits.  The entry big and round and glorious.  The midpalate elegant, strong, refined and richly cognac-like with citrus and herbs.  Lovely drying tannins on the finish.  This is clearly one for the ages.  Jim Rutledge shows that Four Roses is still pushing the art form of Bourbon to new heights.  This is a bourbon that, tasted immediately after the Frapin Extra Grand Champagne shows that American Bourbon is a spirit that, at its highest levels, clearly rivals the very best of the world's spirits.  Hats off to Rutledge and the Four Roses crew.  I'm seriously buying this one.

Balcones' Chip Tate
Balcones - Having tasted and reviewed Balcones Brimstone I was intrigued by the clearly high level of crafting, but wasn't totally convinced.  Brimstone is bold and original - but it is out there as a flavor profile.  I wasted no time in parking myself in front of master distiller Chip Tate and tasting the whole line.  It was, literally, a conversion experience.  Chip poured and explained and guided me through the line.

Texas Whiskey - a malt whisky - had eucalyptus scents in the rich wooded nose; rich sweet malt honeyed entry and a lovely dusty oak finish with a feel of the Texas terroir.  I was, frankly wonderfully surprised and pleased by the refined and delicious presentation.  This is the best US craft malt whiskey I've yet tried.

Rumble  - a fascinating distilled product made from sugar and figs (so it's part rum and park eau de vie).  Blackberries, wine, and meade.  Lovely.

"Magical" Rumble Cask Reserve
Rumble cask reserve (cask strength).  OK - here is where the wheels of my resistance fell off.  This is an astounding product with the grace, refinement, and sheer deliciousness of the best rums I've tried - but it's not a rum.  This is one of those magical spirits that rival the top spirits in a range of categories - rum, cognac, eau de vie etc... I must get a sample for review.  (out of bottles)


Baby Blue and True Blue - blue corn 100% corn mashbill corn whiskeys.  Baby Blue is rich and sweet with a young vigor.  True Blue, the cask strength expression is another of those refined landmark products that rivals the great spirits of the world.  I took a sample of this for a full formal review in the next few weeks.  True Blue was astounding.  I begin to fall head over heels.  But Chip wasn't finished yet.  He poured me a parting shot of a rare limited edition of  Balcones Brimstone called Barrel 1200, or "the burned barrel".  It was huge.  The nose took Brimstone's sweet mequite brushfire notes to another level of high resolution fidelity and enormous terroir.  On the palate it was titanic, and yet elegant and refined.  Ultimately astounding.

There were other highlights too and many more drams: Old Pulteney, Glenfiddich.  I met David Allardice of William Grant & Sons.  We had a dram of Glenfiddich 15 Solera.  I took a sample for future review.  The healing continues and I'm beginning to understand and come to grips with the Glenfiddich floral honeysuckle honeydew melon Speyside flavor profile.  I had a wonderful interlude with Amrut, including tasting most of the line including Intermediate Sherry and the new release, Kadhambam - aged sequentially in bourbon, sherry, brandy, and rum casks.  Gal wrote a detailed review of it in Whisky Israel.

An important mention.  George Manska was evangelizing and selling The NEAT glass.  The Scotch Noob reviewed the NEAT glass last week.  I picked one up and plan to corroborate his work (and add the Reidel scotch glass into the mix) in a review in the near future.

My biggest regrets were that I missed the following tables because of short time:
Glenmorangie / Ardbeg
Breckinridge
Corsair
Smooth Ambler

All in all, a night to remember and treasure.  I can't wait for the next one.  I learned a lot.  Come early, stay light, carry lots of empties!  A magical room where everyone is happy and everyone you see is pouring for you!

Saturday, March 10, 2012

Midrange Cognac overview

I sure do enjoy a nice Cognac from time to time. Cognac is a grape brandy made in the controlled region of that name a bit north of the famous Bordeaux wine region in France's central west coastal region. They make a thin light white wine, distill it twice in special "alembic" stills and then age the distillate in French oak casks in carefully atmospherically managed caves. The better cognacs are bursting with citrus and vinous fruits, densely floral, syrupy rich in texture and redolent of nuts, leather, sandalwood and oak. Some of the cheaper ones are afflicted with a turpentine-like burn.  Cognac comes in, broadly, three main varieties VS (aged at least 2 years in cask), VSOP (aged at least 4 years), and XO (aged at least 6 years - but typically far older).   Another major variation is the region of grape production.  Grand Champagne and Petit Champaign are in the heart of the region - adjacent to the town of Cognac, with the best soil which is chalky.  Grand Champagne's soil is less compacted than Petit's.  Borderies is just to the North and is a clay and flint plateau.  Fins Bois is a wider ring around these three.  It has a different kind of soil - red clay and limestone.  Bons Bois is a wider ring going out to the limits of the controlled region with similar soil to Bons Bois - but more sand in it.  There is a western maritime zone further out called Bois ordinair where the soil is primarily sandy.  I've yet to see a cognac that mentions that region by name.  Supposedly the quality of the grapes is better in the chalky Champagne Crus - although opinion is not unanimous.
The map of the Cognac Cru regions from the wiki article on Cognac
 FYI - the word "Champagne" here has nothing to do with the Champagne region of the North of France where the bubbly wine comes from - it's just a word for "countryside" in Latin.  Cognac runs a color gamut from marigold yellow through orangey copper on to amber and then all the way to hazelnut shell brown.  These color variations roughly correspond to age with VS tending to be in the yellow to light orange range, VSOP tending to be in the dark orange to amber range, and XO tending to be in the amber to reddish brown range.

Most cognacs have a much narrower range of variation in flavor profile than scotch does (although the wider world of brandies has considerably more variation than you'll find in Cognac alone - including some lovely leather and fig Spanish, refined sweet South African, and very distinctive Armenian ones).  However the  sweep of variation from bad cognac to really nice cognac is breathtaking.  So, sadly, is the hype and marketing goo goo.  Ranging from pseudo-imperial French pretension with a predilection for insanely expensive bottle materials (i.e. gold, platinum, uber crystal etc...) to a weird contemporary hip-hop connection, the way Cognac is sold can be stomach turning in my opinion.  Nevertheless, the issue is, as always, what's in the glass when the gauzy models, leather clad rappers, and fancy packaging are left behind and out of mind. 

Tonight I'll be looking at a few of the the market leading cognacs across the age and region spectrum to take a quick survey of the segment.  The purpose here is to see 1) do I really notice or care about the differences among VS, VSOP, and XO, 2) to sample a few of the major brand leaders.  The 4 leaders in Cognac are Remy Martin, Courvoisier, Hennesy, and Martel.  Together they sell about 90% of all the Cognac sold world-wide.  3) I wanted to throw in a fairly inexpensive domestic brandy to see if it could compete.  A single data point isn't definitive - but it's better than nothing.  I chose E&J VSOP because it was handy and regular E&J was the dominant quaff in my childhood home in California.  Clearly I should have chosen something else (and will in the future).  Here we go:

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Courvoisier VS 40% abv - lacks the Cru region statement that the other Courvoisier's have. $34/750ml (prices all from Shopper's Vineyard in Clifton, NJ - right near me)

Color: coppery gold (light orange)

Nose:  Marmelade, honey, some light sandalwood - pretty weak.

Mouthfeel is very light.  Entry is sweet with vanilla and a vinous simple sugar note with a prominent sawdust wood note with an incense perfume aspect (patchouli).  Midpalate expansion is mainly a mild spirit heat.  There's not much depth here.  Finish is very short, mainly spirit heat - but also some wood in the fade-out.  It doesn't suffer from the turpentine burn of bad brandy - that's the upside; just from a lack of depth of flavor. 

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Hennessy VS 40% abv: $30/750ml

Color: orangey amber - also lacks a Cru region statement.

Nose: Light sandalwood / patchouli incense perfume is the dominant lead off note.  Slight citrus note, but not much else past all the incense.

Like the Courvoisier VS, entry is sweet and light - dominated by a sweet simple sugar vinous note and a burst of fresh sawn wood with a patchouli incense flavor.  Spirit heat is even more present here than with the Couvoisier VS in the midrange.  This stuff is hot.  There's a little hint of the turpentine notes.  Ironically, the finish is a little longer with some nice almond notes, less bitterness than the Courvoisier VS in the finish, and some nice oak.  

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Remy Martin VSOP 40% abv. - all the grapes come from Grand and Petit Champagne. $40/750ml


Color: orangey amber

Nose: nice jammy orange, honey, dates, prunes, figs, and black currants initially. There's a little oak wood sandalwood perfume. Noticeably absent are floral notes. With time, the intensity of the nose fades, unfortunately. Still, what lingers is pleasant. I could nose this for a while.

Entry is vinously sweet, spicy and a bit woody. Midpalate broadens into tasty sherry notes, vanilla floral notes and big oak spice. The finish is medium in length with lovely fading cabernet with some nice grape seed astringency. With extended time the mouth feel becomes a bit thin but the flavor profile is pretty tasty and distinguished. It's not intense - but it presents the clear strong flavors of grape spirit, oak sugars, and oak wood notes.

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Courvoisier VSOP 40% abv - a "Fine Champagne" meaning over half the grapes come from the Champagne region. $38/750ml

Color: orangey amber

Nose: jammy citrus and candied orange peel.  Blackberries, walnuts, red currants.  


Entry is sweet and a bit spicy.  There's vanilla and a nice cognac jam-like citrus and grape rancio taste.  Midpalate expansion is hot (a sign of young spirits mixed in).  Mouthfeel is light - belying the darker color.  Finish is medium short with spirit heat, rather than oak driving.  There are some vanilla and oak notes in the finish that are clearly part of the good cognac flavor profile.  However there's too much admixing of lower quality spirits here.  This is a disappointment.

[Update: the following day I drank another sample of this and enjoyed it better.  Lighter, less spicy, less flavor dense, and rounder than Remy or Frapin, it still was flavorful and nice to quaff.  I stand by my original assessment - that Courvoisier VSOP comes last comparison with Remy Martin VSOP and Frapin VSOP - but "a disappointment" is a bit too harsh.  It's not unpleasant to drink.]
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Frapin VSOP 40% - all the grapes come from Grand Champagne Cru - specifically the Frapin estates. $62/750ml

Color: light orangey amber

Nose: crystallized orange, faint citrus flowers, cognac spirit, sultanas, distant oak.  The best nose of the VSOPs in this segment.


Entry is sweet with white raisin grapey syrup. There is glory and rich mouthfeel in the sweet thrill of this opening. Midpalate blooms quickly with jammy citrus notes of orange and lemon, spirit heat as peppery boldness, and also a confectionery candy quality with somewhat faint floral overtones of honeysuckle and jasmine. In the transition to the finish things rapidly darken as floral oak turns to tannin bite. This emerging bitter note meshes well with the crystalized orange as an candy orange rind feeling. Finish is moderately long with a cilantro note in the back of the throat at the fade out and lingering vinous sap.

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Frapin Chateau Fontpinot XO - all the grapes come from the single plantation at the Chateau Fontpinot in the heart of the Grand Champagne Cru. $105/750ml at Park Ave, $90 on line.

Color: dark orangey amber - henna tints

Nose:  august floral vanilla with a big floral component that includes honeysuckle and some rose notes.  Confection in the form of marzipan (candied almond paste), plus darker nuts (walnuts or hazelnuts), and dark caramel.  There's a big wood perfume aspect too:  oak, and sandalwood.   This is a rich and luscious nose that you can bury yourself in for literally hours.

Entry is rich with dark burgundy, quince, black figs, and plum/prune flavors,  The midrange expansion brings in tobacco, walnut skin, and sandalwood perfume.  The finish is long and dominated by vanilla, sandalwood oak perfume, and rancio (grape noble rot with cheese-like overtones).  It's a rich and heady pudding.

Clearly Frapin Chateau Fontpinot XO needs to be considered among other XOs.  The purpose of putting it here was to represent the class and see if it clearly outclasses the other offerings.  The answer is yes, indeed - and how.  This stuff is a whole different ball game.

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E&J VSOP Brandy 40% abv - from Modesto California.  $10/750ml
California grows some of the best wine grapes in the world, so the brandy ought to be excellent, however the leaders, Korbel and E&J never did it for me.  I haven't tried Germain-Robin, which is well reviewed.  I figured I'd give E&J's upscale "VSOP" variant a try:

Color:  yellow-orange

Nose: orange creamsickle

Entry note is cough syrup.  Chemically, medicinal, and gripped by an artificial orangy flavor.  This is going right down the drain.

FYI - the base expression of E&J was better.  See my review here:
http://www.cooperedtot.com/2012/03/e-brandy-us-domestic-price-per-volume.html

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So, let's review:  the two VS offerings were light, hot, and unbalanced in that they had too much patchouli incense and spirit heat and not enough body, complexity in the sweetness up front or the nose, and enough wood in the finish.  They weren't undrinkable; but I'm not going to seek VSes out.  At $30-35 they don't compete with bourbons or even Scotch in this price range.  In the VSOPs things are different.  There are VSOPs that satisfy and compete successfully with bourbons and Scotches of comparable price.  Remy is less floral and citrusy than the Frapin VSOP, but doesn't strike any off notes. Given that Remy VSOP goes for $40 around here and Frapin VSOP goes for over $60, that's fine. The Frapin VSOP is close to entry level XOs in quality and price - and is more a transitional form between VSOP and XO.  Part of its expense is that it is composed solely of Grand Champagne grapes.  Frapin VSOP was the best of the VSOPs in this test, but Remy VSOP isn't embarrassed by the the Frapin VSOP at only 2/3rds the price.  Furthermore, Remy VSOP has superior mouth feel, flavor density, and balance to Couvoisier VSOP which is very close to the same price.  The less said about E&J "VSOP" brandy the better.  The sole XO here, Frapin Chateau Fontpinot, stole the show and is a highlight experience.  I'd have to say it represents excellent value at its relatively high price.  Spirits that cost in the vicinity of $100 should wow you.  This one absolutely does.

Bottom line Remy Martin VSOP is very much the winner here in the mid-range price segment.  I learned that I like the best quality (surprise, surprise).  But for an everyday Cognac, Remy Martin VSOP is like Johnny Walker Black Label - it comes close to a stylistic archetype via extensive blending and achieves that at a very realistic price.  Cognac is enjoyable and satisfying when you spend long green to get special examples.  But Cognac is also enjoyable and satisfying at mid-level prices too.

Friday, February 17, 2012

Frapin VSOP cognac delivers floral, citrus, and oaky glory - a small slice of the high end you can rationalize any time.

Frapin VSOP Cognac is a great story: a giant estate in the heart of the Cognac region with a castle that has housed the family that owns this spirit making operation since the 13th century. The estate is large
enough that all the grapes for their cognac are grown on the estate - unusual if not unique for the region. The house of Frapin is obsessed with quality, emphasizing dry cellaring over the more common damp cellaring. Dry is more costly as it increases the loss of the angel's share - but concentrates flavors because water is lost in proportion with spirit over time unlike damp cellaring which adds smoothness but sacrifices intensity by keeping the water proportion higher. How does all this trickle down to the mid-priced VSOP product (their second to the bottom of the line?)

Color - orangy amber - a rich and pretty color but certainly not the rich henna tones of the serious stuff.

Nose: crystallized orange, citrus flowers, cognac spirit, sultanas, distant oak

Entry is sweet with white raisin grapey syrup. There is glory and rich mouthfeel in the sweet thrill of this opening. Midpalate blooms quickly with jammy citrus notes of orange and lemon, spirit heat as peppery boldness, and also a confectionery candy quality with somewhat faint floral overtones of honeysuckle and jasmine. In the transition to the finish things rapidly darken as floral oak turns to tannin bite. This emerging bitter note meshes well with the crystalized orange as an candy orange rind feeling. Finish is moderately long with a cilantro note in the back of the throat at the fade out and lingering vinous sap.

This is a delicious and classically cognac flavor profile. It shows
its lack of age in the absence of cheese (rancio) notes and relative lack of floral complexity - but these are not missed in the drinking; sins of omission; not commission. Frapin VSOP makes no mis-steps. What's here is all good. About as tasty a mid-tier cognac ever is. Frapin is pricey for a VSOP. You might be tempted to go for a lesser XO. Don't underestimate the sprightly youthful quality's upside: floral and fruity and somewhat light hearted, Frapin VSOP succeeds.

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