Robust orange wines like Radikon, Gravner, Princic, Movia, Rencel, etc pair very well with fried foods (Louisiana style chicken), high spice (heat) and ‘’new american’’ cuisine. It opened up a realm of possibilities for pairings. Definitely worth checking out!
Great video Konstantin. I worked in a restaurant just outside Arbois many years ago. The locals at that time were very proud of the region’s Marc du Jura and Vin Jaune. Perhaps a video in 2023 on Jura and its more contemporary styles.
I do agree, and by the same token, I disagree with a point in the video that implies they become uncool once they gain mainstream success. That may be true in a sense, but not in a directly causal way. When these wines become super expensive as a result of the popularity they become less desirable, not merely due to the status of mainstream success.
I dont consider myself a hipster by any means. I think Adrien Dhodts champagnes are extraordinary, my understaning is he tries to bring body and concentration throught meticulous work in the vineyards, harvesting ripe grapes and obtaining considerable dry extract. To me this is much better than harvesting large yield of underripe grapes and correcting the harsh acids with higher dosage, but to each their own.
Really nice video. Here in south america wines made from the País grape (aka Criolla Chica in Argentina and Mission in US) are the "hipster" thing of the moment. Very fresh and low alchool reds for the summer...I love it.
Being in France, I had the chance to taste all the french wines in the video by my Natural wine geek friends, and I kind of agree with you on the tasting notes... Especially Domaine de l'Ecu, because I think the price justifies the rarity of the cuvée but not the quality, however his Malbec is nicer... Happy New Year Kostantin 🍷🍾🥂
The quality of these wines, especially in relation to their prices confirms my opinion of hipsters' wine choice in general. I don't look for "cool" or "hip" or " a new find", I just look for quality at a good price point. Riesling from the Saar, Carmenere from Chile, Shiraz from Barossa and Merlot from Francs Côtes de Bordeaux.
I live in Ontario, Canada, which is notorious for being a difficult place for overseas vineyards to sell their product based on lack of ability to meet volume requirements. It is very frustrating. I always look for wines that you review, but it is difficult. I do plan to buy the Viña Cubillo I saw on a video. I can get that! Have you tried many Canadian wines? We certainly haven’t reached a great standard yet in my very inexperienced and humble opinion, but there are a few diamonds in the rough. We tend to drive to the Finger Lakes in New York. They have some excellent wines! Love your channel! Thanks for sharing your knowledge.
Ryan - try some of our BC wines, especially from the South Okanagan. World class… but usually small producers that are not exported and are even hard to find in liquor stores in BC itself. Impossible to find an Ontario. Sometimes better luck in restaurants and ordering from the wineries directly.
I have tried some Niagara Cabernet franc and it was very good. It was from Pearl-Morissette. Sure, here in Europe it was kinda expensive when you compare to the competition from Loire but it was very enjoyable
Oh dear I think I might be a hipster! I have a few bottles of Savagnin from Jura and a bottle or two from Domaine de l'ecu, this was an entertaining video, I am looking forward to opening a nice bottle of champagne as I was ill over the holidays with flu and did not have a chance to enjoy a nice glass of bubbly
My girlfriend Is from Gorizia and radikon cellar Is in Collio Hills near Gorizia on the boarder with Slovenia.. that area Is really famous for orange wines.
I really love that you are not afraid to downvote hipster booze when it's not good and call out XB Champagne as harsh when it is. As for this year's plans, inspired by your favorite wine of this tasting I think I may revisit Jura, both ouillé and non-ouillé, which I have banned from my cellar a long time ago.
@@mathiaslaustrup Oh I love the area, beautiful scenery. It's just the wines that are crap. 😜 No seriously, when I started my wine journey about 20 years ago no Jurassic wines appealed to me. As there was no cellar back then, there was no ban from it either. Since then there was so much to discover that it just didn't occur to me to re-assess my novice verdict. Thanks to Konstatin now seems a good time to do just that. Happy you found your niche.
I feel like the quality of SP68 changes a lot between vintages. The 2016 was excellent, but the 2017 was quite unpleasant. You should try the cuvée 'Siccagno' from Occhipinti, really an excellent wine!
Well well well. Arbois (Fleur de Savagnin), Loire CF , Tokai Friulano and Sicily (COS Frappato) are all regions from which I tried wines that blew my mind 10-15 years ago. A lot of natural wine experimentation here, although not all of my discoveries were of the natural leaning - and I think the only other region I can think of that I encountered in those exploratory years (they still are to be fair) that you haven't covered is Beaujolais (Foillard). As to what I want to try this year - hopefully something in my cellar will be mature enough to drink! As I watch this, enjoying a 2018 Vincent Paris St Joseph Les Cotes. Blimey this is good!
The other side of the story on low alcohol wines in Sicily is that the vines actually shut down due to the extreme heat (this is particularly true for these hands-off-approach-type wineries). Occhipinti's wines are quite lively and - from experience - tend to lose the reduction after a good swirl. Agree on the pricing, but I guess that's what the hype-culture creates.
Some of my favorite wines are of the Savagnin Ouille style, but I'm yet to taste the one in this video. Will most definitely be on the look out for it. Great video as always!
Konstantin, I'm a 77 year old resident of Vancouver and my love of wine is very simple, if the price is right and its from my province of British Columbia I will give it a try so my question to you is have you ever had any Wine from here. I know that the wine industry here is very young and doesn't have history behind it... Absolutely enjoy your videos and I'm a fan for life... Cheers 👏👏👏🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦
I'm probably the most random person on this channel, I rarely drink alcohol, let alone wine. But I loove these reviews. I also love how awesome the design of hipsters wines.
Not sure if I will manage to do so because everything in live became so expensive during the last month but I hope to be amble to drink (or at least buy) one of the following wines this year: - A madeira or port from the 19th Century - Le Pin - Clos de Tart Think it might be the last one because it seems to be the most affordable of these.
This is really cool and entertaining - do include food pairing notes to broaden our experience 😚☺
Рік тому+1
JAKOT read backwards is TOKAJ. That’s one of the ways winemakers in this area got around the issue of Hungary banning everyone else but them from using this word for wine.
I recall having biodynamic organic wine as part of a paring at Michelin eatery in San Fran - it was XS hipster…and one of the wines (a Riesling) was cloudy, with acetone flavors - it was off, and yet the sommelier swore it was fine and the asinine other customers were raving. Frankly, they were dickheads. I love a good posh restaurant but avoid hipster…where the bread was like those KFC rolls and some tosser gives a speech about the lightness of the bread and how good natural fermentation is (generally, I’ll take preservatives, thanks😇). What to try this year - I’d love to see a comparison of old world medium end vs new world high end equal blends or cab or Shiraz…from an Oz PoV, torbreck Laird or Runrig or Hentley clos otto or Woodland or Riddoch Cab Sauv…unfortunately Oz doesn’t do high end merlot so that’s out….compare to French, US and Chile/Argentina/Peru?
I love this video!! Hedonism Wines in London have a whole cave full of artisan wines from avant garde producers; they're intriguing to look at! Thank you for shedding light on the subject; they're clearly worth a try!
I'm from Sicily. There are definitely some great wines here. I didn't really like that particular bottle from Occhipinti either. There is a great bottle I've tried it is called G. Milazzo Duca Di Montalbo. 2007 Vintage.
I’m from Australia Konstantin and love my reds but I find myself gravitating and wanting to explore more Chablis.. I find good Chablis to be exquisite 😎
I just managed to buy two bottles of Cerasuolo d'Avola "Grotte Alte" 2016 from Arianna Occhipinti (waiting for them to arrive) and I have a bottle of Frappato. I really look forward to try those, as they seem to be very good wines! I have some Sicilian origins, and I love Sicilian wines. Not because I'm hipster, but definitely because I love that country, and it has so many minor varieties to try! Wines I would recommend you trying: the Malvasia Delle Lipari of Antonino Caravaglio: both the single Cru "Infatata", and the Occhio di Terra (orange). And his Passito version... I love it!
I have a thing for St. Laurent from Germany - Sauvignon Blanc from Loire and Weissburgunder from the Pfalz. Had a thing for sicilian bio wine around Etna, super fresh and vibrant.
I prefer the Radikon "Sivi" from those culty cool guys, but sometimes the Jakot is all I can get. Im just a chick from Kansas trying to keep up. I am pretty surprised that Frank Cornelissen did not make the hipster cut..???
Great video again! Speaking of Jura white wine, next time I would like to see you tasting traditional Sous-voile Jura white wines. Also I would like to know which food goes well with those wines.
Honestly, I still know nothing about wine and I'm just here for the tasting notes and your passion. Closest I'll personally get to a Wine is a Geuze or a Framboise so really just here enjoying anything you do regardless of the quality of the wine you talk about :D
Hi Konstantin, great video, I like it. Especially the Champagne sounds very interesting to me. What about a video which is more dedicated to "German Hipster Wines". That would something I am really interested in ....
I just started watching you content and LOVE IT! It's very informative and enjoyable to watch with a glass of wine! What is your opinion on wine aerators? Use them?
Yes it would be interesting se a tasting of Gravner, and Dario Princic. But wines like that should be left in the glass, or a decanter, for a while to "open" to get the full experience in my opinion.
Tolles Video. Realistische Einschätzung. in 2023 sind bei mir die 2010er und 2015er Bordeaux angesagt. Und insbesondere der Spaßwein 2005er Ch. DuTertre.
I'm sure someone has asked this before, but how are you able to open so many bottles at once? Do you make these tasting on different days, or do you share them with others?
Happy new year to you too 🎉 I have not seen all of your videos but have you ever tried (on camera) some really undercover wines that are not distributed internationally? I am from small winery 15k bottles with almost no eshop wines, only few wine shops and restaurants and I am looking for this kind of wines in my country. This wines I want to try this year because just like in our wines I can feel some special spirit and character in wines made this personally and by simple village farmers. What you think? 😊
I'm looking so much forward to have a first taste of the Argiano Brunello 2016 this year. I wanted to give the bottles a bit of time to relax before pulling the first cork. And that will happen some time this year :-)
Many of the more distinct "orange wines". Like Radikon should be left in the glass a little while, or a decanter for at least 30 minuttes to give full experience. Before that they are quite "closed" and can give of a cellar like, or slighty musky flavour.
This video shows how narrative surrounding a producer usually effects the wine price: an "hipster" producer can sell his/her wine to an higer price point just because he/she is viewed as a cool producer by actual standards. That goes beyond the wine value, but "value" is a slippery concept, everyone determines "value" by different standards and different biliefs. Sooooo... ther's a wine for every palate and so be it! :)
Love that you tried the "hip" wines but your intern chose the wrong ones! I would pick Gut Oggau, Jean Yves Peron (high end), Frank Cornelisson, Alessandro Viola...
Really glad u didn't rate some personal favs of mine quite high, so they stay under the radar. However, I think they deserve better. Just my 2 cents. On the other hand, may I correct you on the SP68. It's not an altitude wine, it's not Etna, it's Vittoria, near Ragusa, south tip of the island, practically sea level. They've told me over there that the freshness on the vineyard is kept by the relentless south wind that blows perennially on that region. Go figure. And, hey, you don't remove the wax before uncorking the "waxy" bottles! Loving your channel.
Happy new year Konstantin! This year, I would love to drink (and see a video from you) wines from newer wine regions that can now produce good wines due to global warming: heard England is producing some really good sparklings, even still Chardonnays. Heard there are attempts in the Nordic European countries, etc … As far as wines I will NOT be seeking: orange wines. I have tried a lot this year but I just don’t appreciate them; I really don’t understand why they are so popular and fashionable but to each his own I suppose. I guess I am just not hip enough 😢
Wow these are my kind of wines. Arianna Occhipinti wines are amazing but I feel that her partner Eduardo Torres does a Nerello Mascalese that simply incredible
Thanks for debunking 'hipster' wines, albeit your cap migt be a tad hipster? I'm with you on the 2 percent sugar. I once bought a box of dry Mosel Riesling after reading a recommendation in a winemagazine. Should have tasted it first. Sour like a lemon, really unpleasant and nearly fruitless. All those bottles eventually went into fishsoup... Keep up the good work and happy new year!
I really liked a Dhondt-Grellet a couple of years ago. I think it was the same bottling. If I have a choice, I still prefer a richer style unless it's a good BdB. To a certain extent I feel okay supporting some of these grower producers even if they aren't my favorite because I want to see more options in the US market, which is drowning in Veuve yellow label. At least here in Texas, bars and restaurants charge huge prices for the Veuve when I know they are getting it for a pretty low cost based on volume.
Extra brut and brut nature champagnes are titally trending right now in the region. I agree that this doesnt always work, especially if you have harsher, colder years and the grapes arent that sweet.
Hi Konstantin; 3 mins in and surprised about the R/S for this wine - 2g/l - doesn't that fall into the drier category than Extra Brut in Champagne? (3-6g/l?).. Just checking...
Hey Konstantin, have you heard of historische Rebsorten? They are producing wines with old grape varities for example Schwarzblauer Riesling. If have never tried one of those wines but definitly worth a tasting i would say ☺️ Do you know those wines?
Speaking of hipster hype, I recently picked up a few natural wines from the Serbian wine maker, Bikicki (Uncensored, MOMA & Sfera). Would be cool to have a video on the Balkan region and whether it can produce high quality wines.
Another great video, thank you Konstaning and Leon 🙏 Back to your question - I wanted to try ehm Petrus this year but having second thoughts after you video, maybe next year, perhaps? 🤭 On more serious note, is it appropriate to ask if there is any "dupe" or similar/next vineyard, that can give similar taste experience? Actually, question is: is it possible to have, raoughly speaking, "subsitutes" for Petrus, Latour etc? Would be very interesting to hear you elaborate on this 🙏
Konstantin, you’ve given higher scores to wines with a fraction of the palpable joy you expressed for the ‘18 E&P. Should we question our assumption that a score provides any indication of enjoyment?
Just came back from an all-inclusive resort in Dominican Republic and their free wine was one called Marques de Sitches (The perfect Red). I found it undrinkable so if you happen to find a bottle let me know your opinion. Also the same brand of white wine was also awful...
Marques de Sitches is a brand made to sell in D.R by a local distributor. The wine is an ultra-economical Spanish table wine, one of the cheapest if not the cheapest. Is made in Castilla - La Mancha, outside the protection of the denomination of origin because it obviously does not meet the minimum quality and aging requirements that the D.O.P demands. It is marketed under different brands at the request of the buyer (supermarkets, hotels, etc.) And the bodega who makes it, make it with the cheapest grappe that no body wants and is only to export, mainly to markets that are looking for wines for around €1 a bottle, mostly Canada, Caribbean, Central and South-América, África and Eastern Europe, also some is sold in bulk to the UK, I imagine for use in the food industry (FYI, the bottle and plastic cork cost more than the "wine"). All-inclusive resorts tend to serve the cheapest alcohol possible, because obviously a large part of their clientele consume large amounts of alcohol per day and the prices would not be attractive if they served quality product. But the same applies to their rum, whiskey, vodka etc... they will only have served you the cheapest on the market, brands that even the local poor people avoid...
@@FedericoPrieto13 wow thank you for all the info! Indeed we tried drinking it twice thinking it might have been a bad bottle but it was truly horrific. We ended up spending loads on wines from the list for each dinner… I guess this is the purpose of marques de sitches 😂 to make you spend on better wines!
I visited the Domaine de l'Ecu a few months ago ... I would much rather recommends the white wines there (Taurus for example). The wax thing is a pain in the rear tbh 🙂
I love your page and undoubtedly have more knowledge and more experienced palate than I do, only about 10 years into wine and in wine sales. I would say natural wine is subjective, but there are definitely natural wines that aren't that well made and other that are truly spectacular and most wouldn't guess they were natural or zero zero, etc. It is cool that it might not be your cup of tea or anyone else's, but the attitudes around natural wine are already so negative. I think a lot is that its revival seems to be contrarian for no reason, but so much is about trying to express the grapes and the place they came from as purely as possible. Also, lets not forge the billions of gallons of "clean" or "traditional" wines that are objectively awful for myriad reasons, notwithstanding the fact that they add megapurple and don't disclose additional grapes in the wine like Meiomi does/did. I think the natural wine movement has caused a lot of division in wine with both sides on defense, saying the other is crappier or whatever, of which I know that I literally just did myself in my previous sentence. Lest we forget that there is plenty of amazing wine out there as well as bad wine, regardless if it is natural or traditonal/clean. I find similarities to the way people react when someone said they were into craft beer in recent years rather than, "I like these styles of beer most of the time" and that we see many more breweries trying to making drinkable lagers again. But it is hard to make a really good lager, be it MIller High Life or your local craft brewery that focuses on lagers and does it really well/traditional. We wouldn't shit on a local brewery focusing on traditional lagering techniques like long aging in tank, natural carbonation, step mashing, or triple decoction (unless completely unnecessary), the natural wine movement might not be for you, but tasting a few of them and saying they are objectively mediocre and can't be great, is silly. How many amazing old world wines are generally not at their prime when they are released and need multiple years of aging and not everyone has that time or the proper aging place for such wines? Natural wines often are built to be drank young, of which makes sense because some 90% of wine purchased is consumed within 24hr. Anyway, I love wine and I think divisiveness around it keeps a lot of people in a box or completely away from it all together.
Looking on auction sites for 20+ year old Burgundy and lesser known Bordeaux wines to experience how they age in bottle...any tips or recommendations for someone not willing to pay more that £50 a bottle?
Domaine de l'ecu has beautiful labels, but that and the amount of different wines they are making in the Loire (for quite high prices) made me doubt their quality/price proposition. So I passed on buying them a couple of times. Glad to learn I was right.
Don't conflate this Cab Franc with their excellent Muscadet, which is their bread and butter. It's not the best Muscadet in the Loire, but it's definitely in the upper echelon. The Orthogneiss bottling is especially tasty. For Cab Franc, I agree with Konstantin. Better value elsewhere. See if you can find Emmanuel Haget
This year i want to taste wines from New Zealand. Hawke's Bay, bordeaux blends. Maybe compare Pinot Nor differences between North island's Wairarapa and Central Otago in the South.
Robust orange wines like Radikon, Gravner, Princic, Movia, Rencel, etc pair very well with fried foods (Louisiana style chicken), high spice (heat) and ‘’new american’’ cuisine. It opened up a realm of possibilities for pairings. Definitely worth checking out!
Good to know, i have a Radikon and i never know how to pair it
They're also wines you should open a day before drinking
Great video Konstantin. I worked in a restaurant just outside Arbois many years ago. The locals at that time were very proud of the region’s Marc du Jura and Vin Jaune. Perhaps a video in 2023 on Jura and its more contemporary styles.
Yes, I would love to make one on Jura alone
THIS. 100%. Jura is the bomb.
@@turmify Agreed.
Which restaurant ? Le grappiot ?
The one thing I love about all these so called hipster wines is that they are fun and its accessible for young adults trying to get into wine.
I do agree, and by the same token, I disagree with a point in the video that implies they become uncool once they gain mainstream success. That may be true in a sense, but not in a directly causal way. When these wines become super expensive as a result of the popularity they become less desirable, not merely due to the status of mainstream success.
Surprised and pleased to see one of Arianna Occhipinti's wines on this list. Her single vineyard Frappato's are insane.
Absolutely, incredible how fresh and vibrant their wines taste
yeah man, that's a great wine
@@JackRosei I was just about to say that. Her Frappatto is one of the best i have ever tasted. i enjoyed a bottle last week actually.
@@yeovildancer did you cellar it or enjoy it young?
Did you age or enjoy it young?
Very cool concept! Shoutout Leon for all the sourcing 🎉
Hehe thanks man !
Oh, Radikon is my favourite wine! Amazing, rich and very unique wine.
Mine too!!
I dont consider myself a hipster by any means. I think Adrien Dhodts champagnes are extraordinary, my understaning is he tries to bring body and concentration throught meticulous work in the vineyards, harvesting ripe grapes and obtaining considerable dry extract. To me this is much better than harvesting large yield of underripe grapes and correcting the harsh acids with higher dosage, but to each their own.
Hello from Dublin Ireland 🇮🇪. Love the content
Another fun video. Thank you Konstantin.
Really nice video. Here in south america wines made from the País grape (aka Criolla Chica in Argentina and Mission in US) are the "hipster" thing of the moment. Very fresh and low alchool reds for the summer...I love it.
in South America people drink wine with Coca-Cola
Being in France, I had the chance to taste all the french wines in the video by my Natural wine geek friends, and I kind of agree with you on the tasting notes... Especially Domaine de l'Ecu, because I think the price justifies the rarity of the cuvée but not the quality, however his Malbec is nicer... Happy New Year Kostantin 🍷🍾🥂
Great video! Would love to see a video going more in depth on reduction in wine and maybe some examples of it in a tasting!
Great suggestion!
The quality of these wines, especially in relation to their prices confirms my opinion of hipsters' wine choice in general.
I don't look for "cool" or "hip" or " a new find", I just look for quality at a good price point.
Riesling from the Saar, Carmenere from Chile, Shiraz from Barossa and Merlot from Francs Côtes de Bordeaux.
"The natural wine movement will die a natural death", quoted by Michael Hill Smith MW.
I love seeing jura wines getting attention, it is my favourite wine region, and a beautiful place to visit.
I live in Ontario, Canada, which is notorious for being a difficult place for overseas vineyards to sell their product based on lack of ability to meet volume requirements. It is very frustrating. I always look for wines that you review, but it is difficult. I do plan to buy the Viña Cubillo I saw on a video. I can get that! Have you tried many Canadian wines? We certainly haven’t reached a great standard yet in my very inexperienced and humble opinion, but there are a few diamonds in the rough. We tend to drive to the Finger Lakes in New York. They have some excellent wines! Love your channel! Thanks for sharing your knowledge.
Ryan - try some of our BC wines, especially from the South Okanagan. World class… but usually small producers that are not exported and are even hard to find in liquor stores in BC itself. Impossible to find an Ontario. Sometimes better luck in restaurants and ordering from the wineries directly.
I have tried some Niagara Cabernet franc and it was very good. It was from Pearl-Morissette. Sure, here in Europe it was kinda expensive when you compare to the competition from Loire but it was very enjoyable
Go go saq
Ho Kanada our home and Marxist land true north strong police state
@counselthyself I haven’t had much wine from BC to be honest. A couple from the Okanagan Valley. Anything you might suggest??
Oh dear I think I might be a hipster! I have a few bottles of Savagnin from Jura and a bottle or two from Domaine de l'ecu, this was an entertaining video, I am looking forward to opening a nice bottle of champagne as I was ill over the holidays with flu and did not have a chance to enjoy a nice glass of bubbly
My girlfriend Is from Gorizia and radikon cellar Is in Collio Hills near Gorizia on the boarder with Slovenia.. that area Is really famous for orange wines.
Really appreciate your style.
Merci
Cheers, Marc D
I really love that you are not afraid to downvote hipster booze when it's not good and call out XB Champagne as harsh when it is.
As for this year's plans, inspired by your favorite wine of this tasting I think I may revisit Jura, both ouillé and non-ouillé, which I have banned from my cellar a long time ago.
Lol, you banned Jura wines from your cellar? Congratulations, you just banned one of the best areas in the world 😂
@@mathiaslaustrup Oh I love the area, beautiful scenery. It's just the wines that are crap. 😜
No seriously, when I started my wine journey about 20 years ago no Jurassic wines appealed to me. As there was no cellar back then, there was no ban from it either. Since then there was so much to discover that it just didn't occur to me to re-assess my novice verdict. Thanks to Konstatin now seems a good time to do just that.
Happy you found your niche.
Enjoyed this video. I would love you to do a video/deep dive on wines from Abruzzo; specifically Montepulciano. Awesome work as always!!
I second this.
I feel like the quality of SP68 changes a lot between vintages. The 2016 was excellent, but the 2017 was quite unpleasant. You should try the cuvée 'Siccagno' from Occhipinti, really an excellent wine!
Konstantin started the year in a great note! Nice video with a hip theme. 2023 seems to be a great year!
Couldn't agree more!
Love your channel Konstantin. Could you please do some more Spanish wines, or a special on different Spanish regions?
Well well well. Arbois (Fleur de Savagnin), Loire CF , Tokai Friulano and Sicily (COS Frappato) are all regions from which I tried wines that blew my mind 10-15 years ago. A lot of natural wine experimentation here, although not all of my discoveries were of the natural leaning - and I think the only other region I can think of that I encountered in those exploratory years (they still are to be fair) that you haven't covered is Beaujolais (Foillard).
As to what I want to try this year - hopefully something in my cellar will be mature enough to drink!
As I watch this, enjoying a 2018 Vincent Paris St Joseph Les Cotes. Blimey this is good!
The other side of the story on low alcohol wines in Sicily is that the vines actually shut down due to the extreme heat (this is particularly true for these hands-off-approach-type wineries). Occhipinti's wines are quite lively and - from experience - tend to lose the reduction after a good swirl. Agree on the pricing, but I guess that's what the hype-culture creates.
I will be tasting Cheval Blanc 1985 with my brother in a couple of weeks, never tried this wine b4 and can't wait...
Some of my favorite wines are of the Savagnin Ouille style, but I'm yet to taste the one in this video. Will most definitely be on the look out for it. Great video as always!
Jura is becoming so popular right now that is not hip anymore. Wish I can get my hands on papa Overnoy though!
Konstantin, I'm a 77 year old resident of Vancouver and my love of wine is very simple, if the price is right and its from my province of British Columbia I will give it a try so my question to you is have you ever had any
Wine from here. I know that the wine industry here is very young and doesn't have history behind it...
Absolutely enjoy your videos and I'm a fan for life...
Cheers 👏👏👏🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦
Brilliant and hilarious! Love your content, it's really enjoyable and entertaining.
I'm probably the most random person on this channel, I rarely drink alcohol, let alone wine. But I loove these reviews. I also love how awesome the design of hipsters wines.
savagnin either fresh or aged under flor is one of life's great pleasures
Awesome channel. But I haven't really seen much on South African wines. Value and quality surely almost unmatched. Get involved!
So grateful for your channel. I get to taste the world vicariously through you. Thank you!
I would like to try more French wines this year.
You are so welcome!
Great selection & tasting!
Not sure if I will manage to do so because everything in live became so expensive during the last month but I hope to be amble to drink (or at least buy) one of the following wines this year:
- A madeira or port from the 19th Century
- Le Pin
- Clos de Tart
Think it might be the last one because it seems to be the most affordable of these.
This is really cool and entertaining - do include food pairing notes to broaden our experience 😚☺
JAKOT read backwards is TOKAJ. That’s one of the ways winemakers in this area got around the issue of Hungary banning everyone else but them from using this word for wine.
I recall having biodynamic organic wine as part of a paring at Michelin eatery in San Fran - it was XS hipster…and one of the wines (a Riesling) was cloudy, with acetone flavors - it was off, and yet the sommelier swore it was fine and the asinine other customers were raving. Frankly, they were dickheads. I love a good posh restaurant but avoid hipster…where the bread was like those KFC rolls and some tosser gives a speech about the lightness of the bread and how good natural fermentation is (generally, I’ll take preservatives, thanks😇).
What to try this year - I’d love to see a comparison of old world medium end vs new world high end equal blends or cab or Shiraz…from an Oz PoV, torbreck Laird or Runrig or Hentley clos otto or Woodland or Riddoch Cab Sauv…unfortunately Oz doesn’t do high end merlot so that’s out….compare to French, US and Chile/Argentina/Peru?
Happy New Year!!🎉 best wishes.
I love this video!! Hedonism Wines in London have a whole cave full of artisan wines from avant garde producers; they're intriguing to look at! Thank you for shedding light on the subject; they're clearly worth a try!
I'm from Sicily. There are definitely some great wines here. I didn't really like that particular bottle from Occhipinti either. There is a great bottle I've tried it is called G. Milazzo Duca Di Montalbo. 2007 Vintage.
I’m from Australia Konstantin and love my reds but I find myself gravitating and wanting to explore more Chablis.. I find good Chablis to be exquisite 😎
I just managed to buy two bottles of Cerasuolo d'Avola "Grotte Alte" 2016 from Arianna Occhipinti (waiting for them to arrive) and I have a bottle of Frappato.
I really look forward to try those, as they seem to be very good wines!
I have some Sicilian origins, and I love Sicilian wines. Not because I'm hipster, but definitely because I love that country, and it has so many minor varieties to try!
Wines I would recommend you trying: the Malvasia Delle Lipari of Antonino Caravaglio: both the single Cru "Infatata", and the Occhio di Terra (orange). And his Passito version... I love it!
I have a thing for St. Laurent from Germany - Sauvignon Blanc from Loire and Weissburgunder from the Pfalz.
Had a thing for sicilian bio wine around Etna, super fresh and vibrant.
I prefer the Radikon "Sivi" from those culty cool guys, but sometimes the Jakot is all I can get. Im just a chick from Kansas trying to keep up. I am pretty surprised that Frank Cornelissen did not make the hipster cut..???
Cornelissen was hipster five years ago, I think that phase is a bit over now.
Great video again! Speaking of Jura white wine, next time I would like to see you tasting traditional Sous-voile Jura white wines. Also I would like to know which food goes well with those wines.
Honestly, I still know nothing about wine and I'm just here for the tasting notes and your passion. Closest I'll personally get to a Wine is a Geuze or a Framboise so really just here enjoying anything you do regardless of the quality of the wine you talk about :D
Very interesting and... honest tasting.
God damn it now I want some chicken with creamy morel mushroom sauce.
Hi Konstantin, great video, I like it. Especially the Champagne sounds very interesting to me. What about a video which is more dedicated to "German Hipster Wines". That would something I am really interested in ....
I just started watching you content and LOVE IT! It's very informative and enjoyable to watch with a glass of wine! What is your opinion on wine aerators? Use them?
Gravner is another to try in the orange wine genre
Yes it would be interesting se a tasting of Gravner, and Dario Princic. But wines like that should be left in the glass, or a decanter, for a while to "open" to get the full experience in my opinion.
Tolles Video. Realistische Einschätzung.
in 2023 sind bei mir die 2010er und 2015er Bordeaux angesagt. Und insbesondere der Spaßwein 2005er Ch. DuTertre.
This year I definitely want to try wines from Umbria, most notably Grechetto, Spoleto, and Sagrantino!
I'm sure someone has asked this before, but how are you able to open so many bottles at once? Do you make these tasting on different days, or do you share them with others?
throwing away
Drinking, sharing and some goes down the drain.
Hey Konstantin!
With you having mention the movie, maybe give us your thoughts on wine movies you have seen so far?
Dhondt Grellet is one of the best producers from Champagne now. Buy some before it’s too late. My favorite, and i am from Champagne.
Might I suggest a comparitive tasting of German Sekt?
Thanks for another great video! What happened to your empty bottle of champagne?
Happy new year to you too 🎉 I have not seen all of your videos but have you ever tried (on camera) some really undercover wines that are not distributed internationally? I am from small winery 15k bottles with almost no eshop wines, only few wine shops and restaurants and I am looking for this kind of wines in my country. This wines I want to try this year because just like in our wines I can feel some special spirit and character in wines made this personally and by simple village farmers. What you think? 😊
I'm looking so much forward to have a first taste of the Argiano Brunello 2016 this year. I wanted to give the bottles a bit of time to relax before pulling the first cork. And that will happen some time this year :-)
Many of the more distinct "orange wines". Like Radikon should be left in the glass a little while, or a decanter for at least 30 minuttes to give full experience. Before that they are quite "closed" and can give of a cellar like, or slighty musky flavour.
This video shows how narrative surrounding a producer usually effects the wine price: an "hipster" producer can sell his/her wine to an higer price point just because he/she is viewed as a cool producer by actual standards. That goes beyond the wine value, but "value" is a slippery concept, everyone determines "value" by different standards and different biliefs. Sooooo... ther's a wine for every palate and so be it! :)
Also great point about salesmanship! I see more and more reasons to stay active in Toastmasters 😂😂 Maybe when I retire I can be a fun winemaker haha😂
Wohoo! Intimations of mortality there,Konstantin! Worry not, Sir; if the wine ain't hip enough, you're STILL the man to say.. 🌟👍
I once drank wine from Domaine de la Tournelle at Le Verre Vollé and I keep looking for it, never had it since.
Great video. More of Leon on the channel please!
Love that you tried the "hip" wines but your intern chose the wrong ones! I would pick Gut Oggau, Jean Yves Peron (high end), Frank Cornelisson, Alessandro Viola...
Frank Cornelisson? I second that.
Really glad u didn't rate some personal favs of mine quite high, so they stay under the radar.
However, I think they deserve better. Just my 2 cents.
On the other hand, may I correct you on the SP68. It's not an altitude wine, it's not Etna, it's Vittoria, near Ragusa, south tip of the island, practically sea level. They've told me over there that the freshness on the vineyard is kept by the relentless south wind that blows perennially on that region. Go figure.
And, hey, you don't remove the wax before uncorking the "waxy" bottles!
Loving your channel.
Happy new year Konstantin! This year, I would love to drink (and see a video from you) wines from newer wine regions that can now produce good wines due to global warming: heard England is producing some really good sparklings, even still Chardonnays. Heard there are attempts in the Nordic European countries, etc …
As far as wines I will NOT be seeking: orange wines. I have tried a lot this year but I just don’t appreciate them; I really don’t understand why they are so popular and fashionable but to each his own I suppose. I guess I am just not hip enough 😢
Wow these are my kind of wines. Arianna Occhipinti wines are amazing but I feel that her partner Eduardo Torres does a Nerello Mascalese that simply incredible
I've been quite impressed by Domaine de l'Ecu Carpe Diem, which is 100% Melon de Bourgogne but nothing like your average Muscadet.
Thanks for debunking 'hipster' wines, albeit your cap migt be a tad hipster? I'm with you on the 2 percent sugar. I once bought a box of dry Mosel Riesling after reading a recommendation in a winemagazine. Should have tasted it first. Sour like a lemon, really unpleasant and nearly fruitless. All those bottles eventually went into fishsoup... Keep up the good work and happy new year!
I really liked a Dhondt-Grellet a couple of years ago. I think it was the same bottling. If I have a choice, I still prefer a richer style unless it's a good BdB. To a certain extent I feel okay supporting some of these grower producers even if they aren't my favorite because I want to see more options in the US market, which is drowning in Veuve yellow label. At least here in Texas, bars and restaurants charge huge prices for the Veuve when I know they are getting it for a pretty low cost based on volume.
Extra brut and brut nature champagnes are titally trending right now in the region. I agree that this doesnt always work, especially if you have harsher, colder years and the grapes arent that sweet.
Great video and awesome hipster hat. (Assuming it is not cold in your room.)
Hi Konstantin; 3 mins in and surprised about the R/S for this wine - 2g/l - doesn't that fall into the drier category than Extra Brut in Champagne? (3-6g/l?).. Just checking...
Suggestion: Top 10 Sweet Wines / Top 10 Savoury Wines
I'm curious about Dolcetto and St. Laurent. I will do some Nebbiolo, Spatburgunder, and Graciano.
What movie are you referring to??
Hey Konstantin, have you heard of historische Rebsorten? They are producing wines with old grape varities for example Schwarzblauer Riesling. If have never tried one of those wines but definitly worth a tasting i would say ☺️ Do you know those wines?
Speaking of hipster hype, I recently picked up a few natural wines from the Serbian wine maker, Bikicki (Uncensored, MOMA & Sfera). Would be cool to have a video on the Balkan region and whether it can produce high quality wines.
Another great video, thank you Konstaning and Leon 🙏
Back to your question - I wanted to try ehm Petrus this year but having second thoughts after you video, maybe next year, perhaps? 🤭 On more serious note, is it appropriate to ask if there is any "dupe" or similar/next vineyard, that can give similar taste experience? Actually, question is: is it possible to have, raoughly speaking, "subsitutes" for Petrus, Latour etc? Would be very interesting to hear you elaborate on this 🙏
For sure: Lafleur, VCC, Trotanoy, Clinet & friends get similar ratings and are far less expensive-but they ain‘t cheap either!
@@KonstantinBaumMasterofWine Perfect, thank you.
Ch. Gazin right next door to Petrus. 2009 if you can get it.
This year I try crazy stuff, namely wines that hardly ever occur in the wine world, such as Verntasch or Trollinger in 0:10 a good quality 😂
Konstantin, you’ve given higher scores to wines with a fraction of the palpable joy you expressed for the ‘18 E&P. Should we question our assumption that a score provides any indication of enjoyment?
Would have been nice to see some Sasucaru wines reviewed here, would have fit the requirements for the videoz😂👍
Just came back from an all-inclusive resort in Dominican Republic and their free wine was one called Marques de Sitches (The perfect Red). I found it undrinkable so if you happen to find a bottle let me know your opinion. Also the same brand of white wine was also awful...
Marques de Sitches is a brand made to sell in D.R by a local distributor. The wine is an ultra-economical Spanish table wine, one of the cheapest if not the cheapest. Is made in Castilla - La Mancha, outside the protection of the denomination of origin because it obviously does not meet the minimum quality and aging requirements that the D.O.P demands. It is marketed under different brands at the request of the buyer (supermarkets, hotels, etc.)
And the bodega who makes it, make it with the cheapest grappe that no body wants and is only to export, mainly to markets that are looking for wines for around €1 a bottle, mostly Canada, Caribbean, Central and South-América, África and Eastern Europe, also some is sold in bulk to the UK, I imagine for use in the food industry (FYI, the bottle and plastic cork cost more than the "wine"). All-inclusive resorts tend to serve the cheapest alcohol possible, because obviously a large part of their clientele consume large amounts of alcohol per day and the prices would not be attractive if they served quality product. But the same applies to their rum, whiskey, vodka etc... they will only have served you the cheapest on the market, brands that even the local poor people avoid...
@@FedericoPrieto13 wow thank you for all the info! Indeed we tried drinking it twice thinking it might have been a bad bottle but it was truly horrific. We ended up spending loads on wines from the list for each dinner… I guess this is the purpose of marques de sitches 😂 to make you spend on better wines!
New year new wines, looking at trying more wine from the Americas
Wha is your oppinion about "Clef Du Vin"?
I visited the Domaine de l'Ecu a few months ago ... I would much rather recommends the white wines there (Taurus for example). The wax thing is a pain in the rear tbh 🙂
I love your page and undoubtedly have more knowledge and more experienced palate than I do, only about 10 years into wine and in wine sales. I would say natural wine is subjective, but there are definitely natural wines that aren't that well made and other that are truly spectacular and most wouldn't guess they were natural or zero zero, etc. It is cool that it might not be your cup of tea or anyone else's, but the attitudes around natural wine are already so negative. I think a lot is that its revival seems to be contrarian for no reason, but so much is about trying to express the grapes and the place they came from as purely as possible. Also, lets not forge the billions of gallons of "clean" or "traditional" wines that are objectively awful for myriad reasons, notwithstanding the fact that they add megapurple and don't disclose additional grapes in the wine like Meiomi does/did. I think the natural wine movement has caused a lot of division in wine with both sides on defense, saying the other is crappier or whatever, of which I know that I literally just did myself in my previous sentence. Lest we forget that there is plenty of amazing wine out there as well as bad wine, regardless if it is natural or traditonal/clean. I find similarities to the way people react when someone said they were into craft beer in recent years rather than, "I like these styles of beer most of the time" and that we see many more breweries trying to making drinkable lagers again. But it is hard to make a really good lager, be it MIller High Life or your local craft brewery that focuses on lagers and does it really well/traditional. We wouldn't shit on a local brewery focusing on traditional lagering techniques like long aging in tank, natural carbonation, step mashing, or triple decoction (unless completely unnecessary), the natural wine movement might not be for you, but tasting a few of them and saying they are objectively mediocre and can't be great, is silly. How many amazing old world wines are generally not at their prime when they are released and need multiple years of aging and not everyone has that time or the proper aging place for such wines? Natural wines often are built to be drank young, of which makes sense because some 90% of wine purchased is consumed within 24hr. Anyway, I love wine and I think divisiveness around it keeps a lot of people in a box or completely away from it all together.
Looking on auction sites for 20+ year old Burgundy and lesser known Bordeaux wines to experience how they age in bottle...any tips or recommendations for someone not willing to pay more that £50 a bottle?
Du hättest dir den passenden Bart zur Folg wachsen lassen sollen.
We're going for wine and then headed to the park to skatebordeaux
Domaine de l'ecu has beautiful labels, but that and the amount of different wines they are making in the Loire (for quite high prices) made me doubt their quality/price proposition. So I passed on buying them a couple of times. Glad to learn I was right.
Don't conflate this Cab Franc with their excellent Muscadet, which is their bread and butter. It's not the best Muscadet in the Loire, but it's definitely in the upper echelon. The Orthogneiss bottling is especially tasty. For Cab Franc, I agree with Konstantin. Better value elsewhere. See if you can find Emmanuel Haget
@@schneidercm1984 thanx for the information, it's appreciated.
Dissing on Radikon means war (kidding, great video)
Off Subject - what brand of corkscrew do you have? I'm thinking about buying one of the expensive Laquiole brands?
This year i want to taste wines from New Zealand. Hawke's Bay, bordeaux blends. Maybe compare Pinot Nor differences between North island's Wairarapa and Central Otago in the South.