Winey Tasting Notes: A Trio of Chardonnays
Every once in a while I take a trip through my wine journal – because it’s fun and also because I need to plan out my reviews. I don’t review every wine I try. There are times when I just want to drink a glass of wine without all the note-taking and sniffing and swirling, so I may note the name of the wine and it’s vintage, but that’s it. Some wines I have every intention of reviewing but they turn out to be just okay. Not bad, not great…..just good. (I think it’s easier to write about a really good wine or a really icky wine than those that fall in that in-between category.) And some I just don’t get around to doing right away, so they sort of pile up until I decide it’s time to bring them out of the pages of my journal.
That’s exactly the case with these Chardonnays. I was flipping through the pages and realized that I had a trio of them waiting to be written up, so I decided that I’d do it all up in one review:
Cave de Lugny La Côte Blanche Chardonnay (Mâcon-Villages) (2013, 12.5%, Macon-Villages, Burgundy, France) is 100% Chardonnay. White wine grown in Burgundy is also called White Burgundy (or Bourgogne Blanc if you want to get fancy). It costs around $10 here in the US. It’s got a nose of pear and apple and tastes of pear and red apple. I was trying to consciously sample some more French whites, so I was glad to find this one for the price. It’s not aged in oak, which is pretty common in Burgundy, so you don’t get the oak flavors with the pear. You don’t get much of anything with it actually…and I kept waiting for more flavor from this. Not that it was bad…it was just not anything: not oakey, no minerals, no big flavors, not much of a mouth feel.