Blackwater 'Pleasure Garden' Palomino, Robertson
I can’t show you my unedited tasting note, written while trying this for the first time in South Africa, because it’s littered with expletives. However, if you would like to recreate it, simply insert your favourite curse words at regular intervals in the tasting note below:
Absolutely amazing! The aromas are just beautiful, bristling with vivid intensity. Rocks that have been crushed by lemons or maybe lemons that have been crushed by rocks. Some wild herbs, pear skin, raw sourdough and salt-crusted limes. It’s a pure Palomino from vines planted in 1927 and it spent 6 hours on the skins before going into concrete eggs and is bottled without racking. Me!!
Jamie Goode: “From a block planted in 1927, Francois Haasbroek makes 1500 litres of this profound wine, which is named after Hitchcock’s first movie, released in 1927. It is pressed to concrete egg and then doesn’t move, and is bottled straight from the egg. It’s not a flor wine, although by the end there is a white layer of yeasts on the top, so this might be flor activity. Linear, floral and pretty. Perfumed with some bright apple notes. Saline, juicy and linear, with subtle nutty notes.” 95 points
I can’t show you my unedited tasting note, written while trying this for the first time in South Africa, because it’s littered with expletives. However, if you would like to recreate it, simply insert your favourite curse words at regular intervals in the tasting note below:
Absolutely amazing! The aromas are just beautiful, bristling with vivid intensity. Rocks that have been crushed by lemons or maybe lemons that have been crushed by rocks. Some wild herbs, pear skin, raw sourdough and salt-crusted limes. It’s a pure Palomino from vines planted in 1927 and it spent 6 hours on the skins before going into concrete eggs and is bottled without racking. Me!!
Jamie Goode: “From a block planted in 1927, Francois Haasbroek makes 1500 litres of this profound wine, which is named after Hitchcock’s first movie, released in 1927. It is pressed to concrete egg and then doesn’t move, and is bottled straight from the egg. It’s not a flor wine, although by the end there is a white layer of yeasts on the top, so this might be flor activity. Linear, floral and pretty. Perfumed with some bright apple notes. Saline, juicy and linear, with subtle nutty notes.” 95 points
I can’t show you my unedited tasting note, written while trying this for the first time in South Africa, because it’s littered with expletives. However, if you would like to recreate it, simply insert your favourite curse words at regular intervals in the tasting note below:
Absolutely amazing! The aromas are just beautiful, bristling with vivid intensity. Rocks that have been crushed by lemons or maybe lemons that have been crushed by rocks. Some wild herbs, pear skin, raw sourdough and salt-crusted limes. It’s a pure Palomino from vines planted in 1927 and it spent 6 hours on the skins before going into concrete eggs and is bottled without racking. Me!!
Jamie Goode: “From a block planted in 1927, Francois Haasbroek makes 1500 litres of this profound wine, which is named after Hitchcock’s first movie, released in 1927. It is pressed to concrete egg and then doesn’t move, and is bottled straight from the egg. It’s not a flor wine, although by the end there is a white layer of yeasts on the top, so this might be flor activity. Linear, floral and pretty. Perfumed with some bright apple notes. Saline, juicy and linear, with subtle nutty notes.” 95 points