Articles

  • 3 weeks ago | openingabottle.com | Kevin Day |French wines. He

    3 min readMany of us have said this for a long time when it comes to red wine, but it warrants repeating: bigger is not better, it is exhausting. And it is limiting. The only occasions calling for a fiercely tannic, highly extracted, potently alcoholic red typically involve proteins that are on my cardiologist’s “avoid” list. This wine feels like a new standard for excellence in the age of creeping alcohol and astringency.

  • 1 month ago | openingabottle.com | Kevin Day |French wines. He

    5 min readI’ve had Tenuta San Guido’s Sassacaia and Gaja’s Barbaresco and shrugged. I’ve tasted Biondi-Santi’s Brunello and Bartolo Mascarello Barolo and swooned. I don’t bring this up to brag or show some superior sense of tasting acumen, but rather to remind everyone that when it comes to Italy’s most coveted — and therefore, expensive — red wines, the cookie can crumble lots of ways.

  • Dec 29, 2024 | openingabottle.com | Kevin Day

    2 min readThe village of Bouzy in Champagne has a towering reputation. Located in the Montagne de Reims, there is a bedrock of chalk here which gives the wines great linearity on the palate: they are direct, polished and willing to wear any of the nuances of the traditional-method process with grace. If you are looking for a proper récoltants-manipulants to showcase its terroir, Champagne Paul Bara is often at the tip of the tongue.

  • Dec 29, 2024 | openingabottle.com | Kevin Day

    3 min readI took some flack on Instagram for praising Domaine Les Monts Fournois’ 2016 “Côte,” and at first, I wasn’t entirely sure why. It is a delicious, multilayered champagne, and so I said so. But an individual who imports wine and is intimately connected with producers across the region took me to task for “not doing my research.” And in the process, I learned how opaque the origin story of certain champagne can be.

  • Dec 29, 2024 | openingabottle.com | Kevin Day

    2 min readOne of the wines I sourced for my now-DOA First-Taste Guide on Grower Champagne (read the column on this term) was from noted Troyes “grower,” Jacques Lassaigne. Grower is in quotes because — as I found out after I opened the bottle and studied the fine print on the label — he is registered as a négociant. Given the extremely high degree of craft and personality in this wine, Lassaigne proves the larger point that the “grower” phrase only gets us so far.