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1982 Château Chasse-Spleen

Posted: 15:18 Sat 07 May 2011
by jdaw1
London welcomes g-man, The Crusting Pipe, Friday 6th May 2011.

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Re: 1982 Château Chasse-Spleen

Posted: 15:29 Sat 07 May 2011
by jdaw1
[url=http://www.theportforum.com/viewtopic.php?p=42434#p42434]Here[/url] JacobH wrote:The claret (I’m afraid the house name escapes) me was truly excellent. I don’t really drink Bordeaux and this was the first one I’ve tried in ages that really grabbed me and made me realise what it could be like.

Re: 1982 Château Chasse-Spleen

Posted: 22:36 Sat 07 May 2011
by Alex Bridgeman
Decanted for 2 hours. Still very youthful in appearance. Fruit driven nose, which Jeff perfectly described as wet tobacco leaves. Sweet fruit on the palate, dry and cheek-furring tannins but with masses of lovely fruit. Gorgeous aftertaste - big, dry and long lasting. This is superb claret. 93/100.

Re: 1982 Château Chasse-Spleen

Posted: 22:39 Sat 07 May 2011
by jdaw1
Sounds delicious. Seemingly about £60 a bottle, all-in.

Re: 1982 Château Chasse-Spleen

Posted: 20:43 Tue 07 Jun 2011
by JacobH
For those who know a bit more about claret, is this a typical offering from Chasse-Spleen? En primeur it’s about £17 a bottle IB which seems pretty good if it matures like this.

Re: 1982 Château Chasse-Spleen

Posted: 17:53 Tue 14 Jun 2011
by Alex Bridgeman
Chaser Spleen is a reliable house and represents good value until it's reputation starts to drive the price up. However, would you rather buy the 1982 vintage now for £60 and enjoy splendid drinking with dinner tonight, or the 2010 vintage for £17 in bond and enjoy a splendid drink in 30 years time after having paid a total of an additional £25 per bottle for storage, duty and VAT?

Re: 1982 Château Chasse-Spleen

Posted: 22:45 Wed 15 Jun 2011
by JacobH
AHB wrote:Chaser Spleen is a reliable house and represents good value until it's reputation starts to drive the price up. However, would you rather buy the 1982 vintage now for £60 and enjoy splendid drinking with dinner tonight, or the 2010 vintage for £17 in bond and enjoy a splendid drink in 30 years time after having paid a total of an additional £25 per bottle for storage, duty and VAT?
Thanks; that’s good to know. But as for the second piece of advice...surely on a Port forum such considerations are irrelevant (or should we all stop buying Port on release? :shock: )! More seriously, I was also looking at some of the minor years of the 1990s where it goes for about £20-25 a bottle which seems quite good value, too.

Re: 1982 Château Chasse-Spleen

Posted: 15:49 Thu 16 Jun 2011
by g-man
96 is approachable

94 is mature but won't be as fruity as the 82.

00 is very lush and approachable as is the 05 (if you don't wnat to wait all those years)

if you like that wet tobacco flavor though, only thing to do is buckle down.

£60 all in? =( sniff, when buying across country lines, i get hit with a 2% finance fee, 3% bank fee and a 1.2% fx exchange fee on top of shipping charges :?

you guys in the uk have no idea how good you have it =)

Re: 1982 Château Chasse-Spleen

Posted: 19:54 Sun 19 Jun 2011
by JacobH
g-man wrote:£60 all in? =( sniff, when buying across country lines, i get hit with a 2% finance fee, 3% bank fee and a 1.2% fx exchange fee on top of shipping charges :?

you guys in the uk have no idea how good you have it =)
Why not move over? Everything points to it. I’m sure there’s a better tea market over here too, and we need a new American to replace Doty ;-)