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James Suckling's Blog Archives

December 2006


When So Few Make the Difference

One of my big surprises this year was how a handful of wines can make a reputation for a vintage. What I am speaking about is 1996 in Bordeaux, and how the five first-growths made the reputation of what should have only been considered a very good year, certainly not an exceptional one. Read more


Discovering the Obvious … to Many

Everyone in the press seems to be writing his or her year-end recollections or discoveries. I just read the New York Times today and it was full of year-end discoveries in food and wine. Some of it seemed pretty obvious to me, but the NYT sometimes likes doing that sort of re-coining of the obvious. Read more


Missing Tokyo and Shafer


Back to earth….from the gastronomic nirvana of Japan with some of the greatest wine collectors ever to home with my mother for Christmas dinner and non-vintage Bollinger and 2004 Seghesio Zinfandel Alexander Valley Home Ranch. Home is always a good thing though. Read more


Flying High for Christmas...


It’s the first time I have had first-growth Bordeaux at 45,000 feet. And it’s very good … too good.

This is crazy. I am pinching myself.

I was going to fly on Cathay Pacific this morning to Tokyo to hang out with some friends for a few days in what must be the best food city in the world. Read more


Drinking the Legend


One phrase keeps on going round and round in my head today following an extraordinary dinner last night that featured eight vintages of Château Pétrus, the legendary Pomerol.

“It’s only wine! People forget this. Read more


Tuscany in Hong Kong


I have a couple of thoughts after a lunch and dinner last night. Modern wines are exciting, and Italy is making great wines. I guess I am stating the obvious to many, and I write about this all the time in articles and columns. But it was exciting yesterday drinking a number of great young Italian wines. Read more


Judgment Day in Hong Kong

I felt like the referee at a sumo match, but the only wrestling being done was the debate over whether certain bottles were fake or not. We were drinking some of the greatest bottles (magnums) ever produced on the face of the earth during a dinner last night here in Hong Kong. Read more


Believe It or Not Blind Tasting Dinner

Insane is the only word I can use to describe it. I was invited to a blind tasting dinner at the restaurant Caprice to celebrate the 30th birthday of Paulo Pong, a Hong Kong wine merchant, and I really didn’t expect to have to try to “find” the wines I tasted during the outrageous dinner. Read more


More Magical Burgundies … For Lunch, No Less

Just got back from lunch with Henry Tang and friends. He wanted to make a great impression on Frédéric Engerer, the president of Château Latour, who is here for Paulo Pong’s birthday celebrations.

I think he did more than that!

I just had probably the greatest lunch of my life. Read more


A Ten, or 100-point Burgundy

What is it about drinking great Burgundy? When it is right, it is so right. It takes your breath away. It’s sensual pleasure in a bottle. OK. I will say it. It’s almost like great sex.

I had a 100-point red Burgundy last night with Henry Tang and a dozen or so others here in Hong Kong during dinner. Read more


Secret Tastings, Great Wines and Vinous Politicians

I just arrived in Hong Kong. I am visiting before Christmas for what should be a major blowout in rare and fine wines. Among the events I have planned with friends are those from wine merchant and mega-collector Paulo Pong. He is hosting a series of lunches and dinners that will include dozens of superrare wines from ancient Latours to amazing 1940s Burgundies from Dr. Read more


Survival with Great Rhône Wines

I survived my 2004 Bordeaux tasting.

I never caught the cold. I tasted perfectly. The only thing that went bad was my stomach. Zantac didn't work. Neither did Rennie. But I tasted about 350 reds from 2004 and a couple dozen Sauternes, and I was pleased. Read more


Hiding Out with 2004 Bordeaux

I haven't been blogging with my normal frequency because I've been lying low in Bordeaux, reviewing hundreds of 2004 reds from bottle in blind tastings here at Les Sources de Caudalie, a beautiful hotel in Pessac-Leognan. I have about 400 samples here, from Le Pin to Bonnet, and I have been trying to get through them as quickly and as accurately as possible. Read more


2004 Barolos and Barbarescos Have Spoken

I had dinner last night  in the Piedmont village of Treviso, at the restaurant La Ciau del Tornavento, with about two dozen producers of the best Barbarescos and Barolos. They were all there, from Bruno Rocca to Domenico Clerico to Enrica Scavino. Read more



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