DATE CONSUMED
Sunday, March 31, 2013 (Easter)
VINTAGE
1993
WINERY/PRODUCER
Opus One
WINE NAME
Opus One
TYPE OF WINE
Red blend
COMPOSITION
89% Cabernet Sauvignon, 7% Cabernet Franc, 4% Merlot
SUBNAME/NICKNAME
N/A
VINEYARD DESIGNATION
N/A
REGION/APPELLATION/A.V.A. (American Viticultural Area)
Napa Valley, California
ALCOHOL CONTENT
13.5%
PRICE PAID
N/A (this wine was a gift from my dad’s cousin)
WHERE/WHEN BOUGHT AND/OR HOW PROCURED
This wine was a gift from my dad’s cousin, who used to have
a liquor store and bought all kinds of wines by the case(s). We had Connie over for dinner one night and
she graciously gave my parents and us a bottle of 1993 Opus One. How sweet was that?!?!
BOUQUET
The bouquet on this 20-year-old
wine screams red fruits (as opposed to the more normal (nowadays, at least)
black fruits), such as raspberries, sour cherries, and currants, along with
suggestions of oak and earth. There’s
also a touch of petrol on the nose; it’s not real obvious or overwhelming, but
I detected a subtle hint of it in the background. Perhaps that’s a common trait of 20-year-old Napa blends? I don’t have enough experience with Napa
blends that old to really know for sure.
TASTING NOTES
This wine, 19.5 years-ish after the grapes were harvested,
is VERY interesting. We all know that
Bordeaux varietals can age for decades, and I assumed this wine would have aged
brilliantly. We cooled-down the wines
and then decanted them (we also had a 2005 Opus One with Easter dinner, which I
also wrote some notes on) for about two hours, which really helped with the
bouquet as well as the sediment that had developed almost twenty years after
harvest.
One major precaution: DO NOT expect a modern, fruity, rich,
creamy Bordeaux blend out of this wine.
Robert Mondavi and Baron Philippe de Rothschild made wines much
differently twenty years ago. Wines (in
general) from twenty years ago were much more austere, had much lower alcohol
levels, and were picked earlier during harvest (probably in September back in
1993, versus late November nowadays (ok, I’m exaggerating a bit there, but you
get my point)).
This wine tastes VERY much like my favorite California
Zinfandel: Caparone out of Paso Robles.
They do not make typical Paso Fruit Bombs; they make a fascinating,
spicy, interesting, unique Zin (in addition to their lovely Italian varietals)
unlike any other Zin I’ve ever tasted.
Their Zin is more like Grenache, and this Opus One tastes more like a
Caparone Zin and/or a Grenache than a typical Napa Valley Bordeaux blend.
The wine is VERY bright and viscous with a mostly red fruit
profile of raspberries and sour cherries (just like the Caparone Zin!). There’s also a generous helping of savory
herbs (thyme, Herbs de Provence, white pepper, and rosemary) and gritty, mature
tannins with earth and oak undercurrents.
This wine has plenty of acidity and like most well-aged reds, the fruit
has taken a backseat to the spices, oak, and earth elements. I was actually expecting some leathery undertones
but couldn’t detect them.
This is a delicious, smooth, well-balanced, deeply complex
wine with a fascinating flavor profile.
It is past the classic Napa “fruity phase” and may be running out of
steam. If anybody still has this wine
in their cellar, I would recommend opening and finishing it soon. We have one more bottle and will definitely
finish it this year. Again, do NOT
expect a big, rich, creamy, fruity Napa Fruit Bomb. This wine is graceful, mature, delicate, and pretty (kind of like
Meryl Streep). If you’re more into the
big, brash, crude/rude, obnoxious, trashy reality T.V. show types (like the
Cuntdashians), look elsewhere.
PAIRING SUGGESTIONS
We paired this wine with lamb chops topped with a roasted
garlic, rosemary, and parsley pesto-like sauce. The combination of the savory, spicy wine paired gorgeously with
the savory, spicy lamb.
This wine would also pair well with just about any other red
meat dish, as well as spiced/marinated pork and/or chicken dishes.
AGING POTENTIAL
As previously mentioned, this wine is drinking well right
now, but I don’t believe it has much life left in it. If you have this wine, drink it now before it’s too late.
SCORE (on a 100-point scale)
91
Q.P.R. (QUALITY-TO-PRICE RATIO) (POOR, FAIR, GOOD, EXCELLENT)
Unknown (don’t know what this wine cost years ago and I’m
not sure you could even find a bottle this old anywhere)
WINERY WEBSITE
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