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Title. Double click me.

Updated: Nov 17, 2022


Deep, bright ruby. Perfumed, floral aromas of cherry liqueur, blueberry, blackcurrant and fine oak. Supple, deep, with good fat- a Parker-styled wine from lush Merlot and fragrant Franc fruit. The palate is fresh, juicy, typical, mineral, dynamic, and intense; the finish is truffle, mocha and undergrowth, chocolate and sweet spice. Quite spicy, with lifted acidity. Lovely gentle extraction; fruit well fixed; bodied; reasonably long. The wine's mid-palate stuffing nicely supports the suave tannins. With an ABV of 13.5%, Le Bon Pasteur 2007 is attractive when young and ageing gracefully. Excellent value.


In a vertical wine tasting on selected vintages from Le Bon Pasteur from 1990 to 2007, we hosted for HKWS 3 years ago, 2007 did not stand out but had been working well enough.


Le Château Bon Pasteur is a 15-hectare property located in the small village of Maillet in Pomerol. When the Rolland family acquired it, this part of the appellation was not one of the most famous ones. It was not until the end of the 1970s, when Michel Rolland arrived at the domain, that this wine gained notoriety. However, even at Bon Pasteur, Michel Rolland completed his winemaking vision. The progress is immediate with a recipe he will apply in the many properties he will advise: grapes harvested very mature, controlled maturing and minimal yields. In 2013, the castle was sold to a Hong Kong consortium. But Michel Rolland continues to follow the vinification closely.


Parker awarded the wine 91 and wrote, 'Tasted blind at the 2007 Bordeaux horizontal in Southwold. An impressive performance from Michel Rolland's Pomerol growth exceeds my expectations from the barrel. It has a very high-toned nose with macerated black cherries, black olive and an estuarine tincture. The palate is quite sweet on the entry, well balanced with supple, fleshy dark red fruits, very harmonious and succinct towards the minerally finish, whilst that nose is beginning to mellow and become more refined. Aeration is certainly benefitting this Pomerol, and it ends up very attractive. Tasted January 2011. (Edited)



This wine has been our introduction to fine wines years back. Deep ruby, 2006 is still fresh, ripe, black-fruited with a tone of strawberries. Soft And velvety. Fine and nice texture. Award RP94, this is commented as 'An ethereal, finesse-styled, Cheval Blanc-like delicacy accompanied by intensity characterize the 2006 l'Arrosee, another terrific effort from new proprietor Roger Caille. A dense ruby/purple colour followed by a sweet perfume of crushed rocks, raspberries, cherries, flowers, and spice. Velvety-textured and structured, with considerable concentration yet a lightness of being, this finesse-styled beauty should be ready to drink in 3-5 years and last for two decades(tasted 2007, edited).


Composition is unique for a St Emilion GCC 60% Merlot, 20% Cabernet Franc, and a more than copious 20% Cabernet Sauvignon designed to age better. Likewise, the terroir is special: warmer and varied.


A fabulous bouquet of grapefruit and Seville orange, laced with savoury herbs such as sage, thyme and rosemary. The medium-full body is framed by zesty acidity and a hint of subtle spice notes on the finish. 100% Pinot Grigio DOC Pinot Grigio Delle Venezie wrote Luca Macori, awarding this wine 95 points. Very consistent quality and is the best vintage in our view so far.


This is a consolidation of the tasting and papers

written from 2006 to 2013. These write-ups had been with the orginal site Wine and Beyond, Yahoo, until the service stopped by Yahoo in September 2013.

 

For years I have been working with wines, either buying it, selling it to wine companies, lecturing and writing about it, and, not unimportantly, enjoying it with friends. If any of the articles on this site are worth reading it is due to my teachers, my mentors, my peers and friends, my students, and in particularly my editors who ignite in me a desire to communicate in wines.

 

Clinging to the trellis of wine, I started to get more and more involved with estates and winemakers, by supporting them with consultancy in communication and marketing. The more I spend my time outside Hong Kong, the more I sense a desire to be part of the international wine family.

 

Writing about wine represents a moment of reflection, curiosity, atitudes and a desire to analyse often hidden structures and history, in an effort to make the wealth of wine accessible to a targetted, and hopefully larger audience.

 

I am not sure if I can wine proivde more accessible to all through this blog. But I am sure to write in wine means being involved in wine and  to remain as impartial and objective as possible.

 

Kevin Tang.

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