Hi all,
was pondering in which thread to post this, but decided it didn't really fit, and may be nonsensical, so easiest to create another thread, even if just to outweigh the pandemic of Corona things....
This is complicated - let me explain:
I drink a lot of wine. Really, lots. (This is evidenced in many of my late night postings over many threads....) And I really love the stuff. Besides that, I am also doing a personal thing of stepping out of my usual habits, and attempting to try as many brands and varietals as I can at the moment - a mammoth task due to the sheer variety of offering these days.
Due to a combination of factors (being a zero-income writer, an avid cook, and the ever-increasing experimentation in more expensive tipples), I have, as a sideline to my varied sampling, been looking for a couple of solid "house wines" - ie cheap stuff that is palatable enough for me but is essentially a negligible cost. (Also something that I can sanely enjoy, cost/benefit wise, as my third bottle of the evening) Something that is not unpleasant to drink, but also something I do not feel bad about if I go to sleep without finishing it. (I am extremely sensitive to opened wines - cannot stomach things that have been opended for 24 hrs no matter if they are screw caps or whatever - do not know the technical term for the change - but it is there and I dislike it)
I am NOT a wine snob - in that I struggle with the ability as of yet to really express things. And I also believe that wine enjoyment is an extremely personal thing - so there is never a global "correct" perception of any wine. But saying that, some wines universally suck
Anyway, as I try to get to the point, I have recently decided to explore Pinot Noir. Haven't yet started, due to some other pressures, BUT....
Given my eternal search for a background "house" wine to buy in bulk to use in those moments I am not exploring, a cheapie just caught my notice the other day at Dans. It is the Frontera pinot noir - down from ten bucks to seven. Due to a couple of horrific experiences with Dans "cleanskins", I have sworn off those. I also refuse to try those cheap wines with the corny labels and el cheapo bottles - I have a bottom limit in what I want in a house wine. So I got some Frontera pinot noir. I thought that if anything, it would give me a starting point in pinot noir from which I could blossom into much more pleasant future experiences.
It is important to understand the above - which in summary is that (a) I know zero about pinot noir (b) This purchase was for that cheap house wine role, and (c) my expectation of a pinot noir, especially a cheapie, was that it would be a wishy-washy light red with no real satisfaction.
The Frontera destroyed my already feeble confidence in wine knowledge. I found it (at the price) a delicious and versatile red - perfect for my house wine role. Much fuller bodied than I had expected. Very easy drinking.
I am so confused with it. Is it even really a pure pinot noir? I have some knowledge of Concha y Toro, the huge Chilean wine conglomerate of which Frontera is one of their cheap lines. I am also aware that carmenere vines in Chile were marketed as merlot for decades until someone did some serious genetic investigation...
But anyway, I have an "ask" - a favour - of anyone on AFF keen to help me. Can you please go and buy a bottle of this stuff and give me your impressions! At $7 a bottle at the moment, it will hardly break the bank,
Please do not compare it to immaculate $50+ bottles of pinot noir heaven. I just want to know if others see it as I am - as a great house wine. And is it typical of a pinot noir????