Georges Duboeuf 1933-2020
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Originally posted by Alain Maréchal View PostI see what it tries to express, but it suggests sanitation.
Gluggable:
Collins Dictionary has: “informal - (of wine) easy and pleasant to drink“
It is commonly drunk fairly quickly and in quantity as it’s a wine of little complexity and thin texture, but it is the cause of what is now an insignificant bit of vinous fun at the local wine bar (or in the kitchen) each November.
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Originally posted by Alain Maréchal View PostAny wine I consider fit to drink is sipped.
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... in which you limit yourself. Brillat-Savarin and Grimod de La Reynière assumed that there would be two kinds of wine available to diners : a vin ordinaire for slaking the thirst, and then, as a quite distinct and separate experience, the 'good' and 'interesting' wines for sipping. 'Gluggability' is a very positive term to describe what one is looking for in the former.
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Exactement.
Merci, vinteuil.
(Armenian Christmas today!)
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Andy Freude
Originally posted by Alain Maréchal View PostAny wine I consider fit to drink is sipped.
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Posta vin ordinaire for slaking the thirst
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Also, Andy Freude, that is such an insult that I may be forced to ask you and a friend to join me and a friend on the dunes of Blankenberge!
*"with which" - I think the English language has missed the chance of a compound there, as in "outwith": I propose "whichwith".
ps last night's Duboeuf 2017 was disappointing, but then Beaujolais has never been among my favourite wines, and I drink it seldomly. (seldomly?)
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... o no I don't. Even Belgians can learn something from the French.
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"I seldom drink it."
.Last edited by Alain Maréchal; 06-01-20, 12:27. Reason: removal of insulting comment about the French
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When I worked in France everyone in the office would say that BN was terrible, and invented to sell poor wine to the English. Then when the day came we'd all trapse along to the nearest cafe, quaff the stuff and discuss whether this year's tasted of bubblegum or pear drops.
There was a cafe on rue de Commerce that gave free glasses of it to passers by. Photo taken in 2002...
Steve
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Many wine areas produce primeur for the reasons I suggested in post #3. I was invited to a tasting of our local wine, Saint-Pourçain. The red tasted, as I expected, of floor polish (ask not how I knew), in addition to the usual St-P length of iron filings and cold tea. If you want to try St-P avoid the produce of the Union des Vignerons and look for the estate-bottled. Sybille Bedford and Elizabeth David both enjoyed it, drunk locally. The usual description is "it does not travel well".
I would suggest to Stunsworth that the cafe on Rue de Commerce had found the right market price.
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Andy Freude
Originally posted by Alain Maréchal View PostAlso, Andy Freude, that is such an insult that I may be forced to ask you and a friend to join me and a friend on the dunes of Blankenberge!
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