Parker's buying advice
- Jay Winton
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Parker's buying advice
from his post on the ebob board:
RB 2003, LB 00,01, 02 and "top" 04s
Comments gang?
RB 2003, LB 00,01, 02 and "top" 04s
Comments gang?
Re: Parker's buying advice
Where is that post, Jay?
stefan
stefan
- Rieslingfan
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Re: Parker's buying advice
Actually he said RB 03 & 01. Some LB 2002s and "top" 04s.
It's in a thread about '08 EP.
It's in a thread about '08 EP.
Re: Parker's buying advice
Jay, The Bob's post suggest that he will be back from Bordeaux just before BWE-DC. Did anyone contact him about coming to the Charlie Palmer dinner?
stefan
stefan
- JimHow
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Re: Parker's buying advice
Hmm, good idea Stefan.
Re: Parker's buying advice
I'll e-mail him.
Re: Parker's buying advice
Sorry..
Does RB mean Right Bank???
According to my own tastings, 2003 on the Right Bank is not (always) that exciting
Last week-end I attended to a blind tasting on the "2003 in France" theme. 38 wines were reassessed and the clear winners (Bordeaux speaking) were on the Left Bank (Sociando-Mallet) and Sauternes (fantastic 2003 Clos Haut-Peyraguey, Climens and Suduiraut). Right Bank properties have generally average to good reviews but seem a bit "overcooked" with a rather limited ageing potential. Of course this overview cannot be generalized to all RB wines but it nevertheless gave us quite a clear preview picture.
Does RB mean Right Bank???
According to my own tastings, 2003 on the Right Bank is not (always) that exciting

Last week-end I attended to a blind tasting on the "2003 in France" theme. 38 wines were reassessed and the clear winners (Bordeaux speaking) were on the Left Bank (Sociando-Mallet) and Sauternes (fantastic 2003 Clos Haut-Peyraguey, Climens and Suduiraut). Right Bank properties have generally average to good reviews but seem a bit "overcooked" with a rather limited ageing potential. Of course this overview cannot be generalized to all RB wines but it nevertheless gave us quite a clear preview picture.
Last edited by AlainB. on Sun Mar 15, 2009 3:48 pm, edited 2 times in total.
Re: Parker's buying advice
Geez, I was thinking RB = red burgundy. Right bank seems more likely.
F
F
- Rieslingfan
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Re: Parker's buying advice
Considering that he was discussing Bordeaux, I would have though RB was obvious.
Re: Parker's buying advice
I thought he was recommending Red Bull.
- JimHow
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Re: Parker's buying advice
I don't read ebob so I didn't know what the hell Jay was talking about.
Re: Parker's buying advice
I didn't read the whole '08 EP thread over there, but my thought on buying Bordeaux right now is: Don't.
Wait until the end of the year, when the '06s are languishing on retail shelves along with the overpriced '05s and the underloved '04s, and '07s are backed up in the pipeline, and '08s haven't sold through very well en primeur. If you still have any money left, that would be the time to buy.
As to vintages, I'm not a big believer in buying a specific year on the right or left bank blindly. It's all about the individual wines. It may be that the right bank produced a number of real winners in '01 and '03 and '04, and that some left bank '02s are winners, but give me more specifics.
Wait until the end of the year, when the '06s are languishing on retail shelves along with the overpriced '05s and the underloved '04s, and '07s are backed up in the pipeline, and '08s haven't sold through very well en primeur. If you still have any money left, that would be the time to buy.
As to vintages, I'm not a big believer in buying a specific year on the right or left bank blindly. It's all about the individual wines. It may be that the right bank produced a number of real winners in '01 and '03 and '04, and that some left bank '02s are winners, but give me more specifics.
- JimHow
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Re: Parker's buying advice
RMP saying "buy 2003 RB" is a bit of news, is it not, I don't recall him being especially over-excited about that vintage in St. Emilion and Pomerol, although I could be remembering wrongly.
Re: Parker's buying advice
ACB says within the 03 RB look for properties atop limestone. Just say no to clay.
Re: Parker's buying advice
Whats ACB?
Not sure I recall RP's initial take on '03, but somtimes things turn out differently - maybe for specific wines or for good deals?
Not sure I recall RP's initial take on '03, but somtimes things turn out differently - maybe for specific wines or for good deals?
Re: Parker's buying advice
ACB = me.
Re: Parker's buying advice
Houndsong wrote:ACB = me.



Shoulda known that...
I was thinking, American College of Bordeaux? Association of Concerned Bordeaux-philes? Nahhh...
Re: Parker's buying advice
Read the first few posts and tell me where "BORDEAUX" is mentioned.Rieslingfan wrote:Considering that he was discussing Bordeaux, I would have though RB was obvious.
F
- Chasse-Spleen
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Re: Parker's buying advice
I'm still stuck trying to figure out EP... Easter Parade?
Re: Parker's buying advice
En Primeur.
Re: Parker's buying advice
I admit to also being confused with the various initials. Are we all that busy that we do not have enough time to spell out the words? I eventually got the EP and would have remained stumped on the ACB had Arthur not explained (I did blush afterward and had a chuckle when he did explain). However, LB is still a mystery to me; I assume it is Lynch Bages and not Leoville Barton.
Best
Jacques
Jacques
- JimHow
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Re: Parker's buying advice
I'm guessing it is Left Bank, Jacques, if RB stands for Right Bank. Although, it could be Lynch Bages or Leoville Barton. if it stands for Left Bank, I find it interesting that he touts the 2002 vintage, something we've been doing here on BWE since the beginning.
Re: Parker's buying advice
LB=left bank and RB=right bank I got. I still don't get ACB even after the explanation and Jacques statement that the explanation made him blush.
stefan, DTADDN
stefan, DTADDN
Re: Parker's buying advice
Personally I think this is OSD
One Stupid Discussion.
Let's try it again some time without all the abbreviations.
F
One Stupid Discussion.
Let's try it again some time without all the abbreviations.
F
Re: Parker's buying advice
Guys,
If he says to buy 03 right bank, I'm surprised.
I did not buy a single bottle.
I found them rather stewed, low in acid and frankly, dull at times.
In relaiton to the RB, I midly agree with 01, 02 and 04.
I have numerous labels from each - and suggest buying all three vitnages with care not as a rule.
If he says to buy 03 right bank, I'm surprised.
I did not buy a single bottle.
I found them rather stewed, low in acid and frankly, dull at times.
In relaiton to the RB, I midly agree with 01, 02 and 04.
I have numerous labels from each - and suggest buying all three vitnages with care not as a rule.
Re: Parker's buying advice
Claudius,
To my view, 2001, 2004, 2006 (and 2008?) are good to excellent on the Right Bank (no generalizations though!). But 2002 is much more a Left rather than a Right Bank success..
As for 2003, I recall Château Le Pin (Pomerol) didn't even produce one single bottle as they considered quality to be insufficient in regard to their standards..
To my view, 2001, 2004, 2006 (and 2008?) are good to excellent on the Right Bank (no generalizations though!). But 2002 is much more a Left rather than a Right Bank success..
As for 2003, I recall Château Le Pin (Pomerol) didn't even produce one single bottle as they considered quality to be insufficient in regard to their standards..

- JimHow
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Re: Parker's buying advice
I didn't realize '01 was such a strong vintage for Langoa Barton.
Re: Parker's buying advice
Funnny, Jim.
I never thought it was Langoa.

Arthur was just kidding by putting his initials and his opinion just after:stefan wrote:I still don't get ACB even after the explanation and Jacques statement that the explanation made him blush.
JimHow wrote:RMP saying "buy 2003 RB" is a bit of news, is it not, I don't recall him being especially over-excited about that vintage in St. Emilion and Pomerol
Last edited by jal on Tue Mar 17, 2009 1:59 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Best
Jacques
Jacques
Re: Parker's buying advice
Mea culpa for perpetuating the "EP" confusion. I am usually very anal about spelling things out, unless they are in notes meant only for myself. But I will tell a story about that. I was once employed by a large multispecialty medical group with close to 100 docs - you can imagine the number of abbreviations. Management decided to make a standard glossary of accepted abbreviations and asked for everyone to submit their recommendations to a committee that would rule on who got to use what in the medical record. Just out of training and with more time than patients, and chafing a bit at some bureaucrat telling me how to write my notes, I compiled an exhaustive list of ophthalmic abbreviations. All of the other docs were too busy seeing actal patients to bother, so my lone contribution was accepted by the committee (which had no docs on it - typical big company bureaucracy). When it was published, the primary care docs and other specialists were a bit peeved that all of their favorite abbreviations for really common things now stood for some obscure ophthalmologic procedure or diagnosis. Of course, no one paid any attention to the bureaucrat's rules anyway, so we all got over it.
Anyway, back to wine...
2003 was supposed to be an "irregular" vintage on both the left and right banks, with some properties doing very well, and others, like Le Pin that Jacques mentions, doing terribly or bailing out. In a year like that, the need to talk about specific wines rather than generalities like right bank or left bank wines is even more critical than usual. My feeling about vintage charts is that their only use is in helping improve your odds picking off a restaurant list containing a bunch of unknowns. Given the time to think about a purchase, I would always go with a more specific recommendation than a generalization. And now in the era of web-enabled cell phones, we're rarely out of touch with our own notes, recommendations from friends and professional reviews.
Anyway, back to wine...
2003 was supposed to be an "irregular" vintage on both the left and right banks, with some properties doing very well, and others, like Le Pin that Jacques mentions, doing terribly or bailing out. In a year like that, the need to talk about specific wines rather than generalities like right bank or left bank wines is even more critical than usual. My feeling about vintage charts is that their only use is in helping improve your odds picking off a restaurant list containing a bunch of unknowns. Given the time to think about a purchase, I would always go with a more specific recommendation than a generalization. And now in the era of web-enabled cell phones, we're rarely out of touch with our own notes, recommendations from friends and professional reviews.
Re: Parker's buying advice
Blame it on JW. He is nowhere near as funny as MV used to be.
Re: Parker's buying advice
What the Bob said:
So not Right Bank 2003's but essentially "the CORRECT 2003s"......seems to me the smart money/drinker is cherry-picking the falling prices for the RIGHT 2003s,the right bank 2001s,some left bank 2002s ,and 2000s if they drop in price....even some of the top 2004s..a largely forgotten vintage, merit attention if the price is right....wine lovers always tend to look to the future for the next best thing ..in these times...going backwards could put alot of great Bordeaux in your cellar...
Re: Parker's buying advice
There you go, complicating things with the facts, Tom. I certainly would agree with the "correct" '02s, '03s, and '04s. In addition to pricing deals, for wines languishing on retail shelves you have the advantage of being able to try them before diving in with larger purchases. If you've got the time and the interest, you can decide for yourself which ones are "correct."
- JimHow
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Re: Parker's buying advice
...Well I like the "right" 1991s, 1992s, 1993s, 1994s, 1997s, etc., etc.
Re: Parker's buying advice
And I like the "right" '82s, '86s, '89s and '90s even better...
- JimHow
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Re: Parker's buying advice
Yes but do you like the "wrong" 1982s better than the "right" 1991s....
Re: Parker's buying advice
Hmm, I think we need to do that tasting. I'm sure we could pick 'em so that either side would win.
Re: Parker's buying advice
Who said there where no great wines but only great bottles?
RP's correct sentence makes much more sense to me now..
RP's correct sentence makes much more sense to me now..

- Rieslingfan
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Re: Parker's buying advice
You guys are missing half the fun - misinterpret RP then get the human shields to mock you in a 15 page thread on RP's site.
Kids...can't...teach...them...anything.
Kids...can't...teach...them...anything.

Re: Parker's buying advice
This kind of reminds me something..Rieslingfan wrote:You guys are missing half the fun - misinterpret RP then get the human shields to mock you in a 15 page thread on RP's site.

Re: Parker's buying advice
Let us not forget that RP missed the barrel tastings of the 2002 Bordeaux vintage altogether because his wife pleaded with him not to travel by air for a time after 9/11. In my opinion he never revisited the vintage in a dedicated fashion, so exploration and futures buying was limited. As a result, prices were very reasonable: all of the 1st Growths were $90., and the top 2nd and 3rd growths were sub $50./ bottle. The U.K. and French wine critics were rather impressed with the northern Medocs. Yields were small, and the talented winemakers' best efforts paid off, especially on the left bank. On the right bank, Vieux Chateau Certan is outstanding. We were thrilled to drink one of these last month.
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