2021 vintage. Hints of richness throughout but never a safe space. Ultimately lean with a massive tannic howdoyoudo but always balanced. This wine will challenge most palates to the moon and beyond. Pretty phenomenal for QPR, yet so distinctive, thinking the general wine public needs a solid two decades to grasp. Screams for food except for the cork dorks that would gobble this up 8 days a week. Oh Sicily! 11.20.24. — 2 years ago
Served blind alongside what was eventually revealed to be the 1971 Mouton Rothschild. This almost had me leaning Napa by a classic producer due to the gorgeous fruit and generous, scratch that, lavish use of new French oak. After careful deliberation with those at the table with more experience drinking Mouton both young and old, I was able to come alongside the others that this was indeed young Pauillac. All the cassis, cigar box, tobacco and baking spices ones heart could desire with some of the loveliest acid. Speaking of, the structure still has quite a grasp of this one but with all the lovely fruit, everything is in brilliant balance, even at 18 years young. Given that, I expect this wine to drink well for decades to come, particularly since secondary characteristics have hardly entered the chat. Definitely a wine I hope to enjoy many more times over the years but so grateful I got to try now. — 3 years ago
Deep in flavor. Smooth well balanced wine. Juicy cherry with bright blackberry and plum, cinnamon and baking spices. — 5 years ago
Pale gold late afternoon. I'm walking downhill by a narrow stream of water. I can almost grasp the mineral oxygen sparkling everywhere the torrent gurgles hitting the stones bed.
The air is so fresh in the valley, the flowers still unformed but spicy. My nose picks up a trace of wet rocks on the edge of the flow being stroked by the current.
Passing by a farmhouse I notice a peach tree with overripe fruits fallen on the rocky soil. I pick up a little apricot from a small tree to caress the velvety skin.
From the open door of the stone house breaks a bright flavor of a lemon cake just before being baked in the company of a bit of ginger and butter.
I will keep that sparkling citrus and drizzly pebbles on the sides of my mouth for the rest of the way. Vino Buono. — 6 years ago
Dark cherries, smoky leather, pretty tannic. Interesting balance of elements for this style. Can’t tell if I’m too inexperienced/unsophisticated to fully grasp the balance, or if they’re presenting too sequentially vs. harmonically. I like it, but I expected something different. Worth trying again with a different dish. — 7 years ago
What a wine. Nose is so complex with unreal aromas that honestly are at once mineral and at once so utterly unique I don’t have the vocabulary to grasp them. Apricots is about all I got but the nose is still a 9.7 even if I can’t explain why. Palate is vivacious, rich and elegant but with so much tannin from what I assume is skin contact but also reads as textured and fresh. So brilliant, complex and utterly distinctive. It’s rare I can’t find words to describe wine but here we are. — a year ago
Finally lost my Heitz MV virginity. One word, wow. The mint-eucalyptus was there on the nose. A very powerful wine that smelled powerful and tasted powerful. Besides the mint , hints of earth & cigar notes but clearly in the background. I was having a hard time trying to grasp how youthful and balanced the wine was on the palate. I found the fruit was on the darker side with lingering tannins. I left this in the decanter for three days. The nose really never diminished, the palate grudgingly. If I had to nitpick I felt it was lacking some of the complexity that I would have expected at this stage. — 3 years ago

Bright Cellar. It was alright — 5 years ago
Smooth, very deep berry flavors — 5 years ago
Monolithic. Just so big and structured it is hard to grasp what is happening here.
My partner in crime loved it and I did too bit it is still soooo huge. I have a magnum that I will not open before 2030..... — 6 years ago
Fresh and youthful, the sensation is that to grasp a handful of freshly picked raspberries in the forest. Very clean, focused, with a good nerve. — 7 years ago
So easy to enjoy. Crisp grasp, minerally — 8 years ago
Doing “research” for an upcoming trip. I was worried about the ‘21 vintage after seeing all of the photos of hundreds of burning smudge pots lighting up the night on the hill of Hermitage, but this is the second bottle (the first was a 21 Côte-Rotie on Christmas Day) that show it’s an excellent young drinking vintage for reasons I don’t fully grasp. An elegant, light-footed Cornas (do these words belong together?), a little lacking in midpalate stuffing and length but no worse for it. Opens up with time - garrigue, black olive notes, cedar chest, fresh black plum. Acid is fresh and bright but not harsh (not like the acid is on so many 21 Burgundies that sadly feel clipped and mean). Really damn pretty. The sort of wine that makes you truly sad when you get to the last sip. — a year ago
Soft, quiet, trades time and air for a shy personality - only after the bubbles have long said goodbye. And they go quick. Most of the Riesling DNA is hidden underneath. For a couple days, I had a hard time finding something to grasp onto, but we got there.
At its peak, soft scented yellow apples and lemon. — 3 years ago
Clean, medium intense but concentrated aromas with a good spicy and savory complexity. Tart at first, but gets more round wirh some air. Red cherries and plums, crushed pepper, dried spice (thyme), bacon, and a pronounced mineral characters of warm stones.
Dry palate with a high acidity, medium well balanced alcohol and medium + tannins with a firm texture that is well encapsuled by a high intense fruit profile with complexity from an earthy and spicy base note. The mid palate shows a good fatigue as the fruit levels up and grasp around the fresh acidity and stony center core through a slong finish .
Brilliant!
— 5 years ago
The first time I tasted this bottling was about 18 months ago, it has developed nicely since. Oak vanilla is still quite prominent - don’t know how because only 30% was matured in oak barrel for about 10 month only - but it’s much more integrated, playing nicely with candied black fruits, leather, incense, and light herbs. Palate is rich and layered - again hard to grasp given the minimum oak treatment. Taste of chocolate, prune too.
Tasty and satisfying. — 6 years ago
Stonehaus Vintners, a Texas Hill Country vineyard, has sought to bring out the finest examples of Australian wine to the Hill Country. They have sourced unique Australian wines, such as the Barossa 2015, to give us here in Texas a true grasp of the Australian Shiraz. "Vibrant fruit of plum and dark cherry are woven between soft spice and soft supple tannins" — 6 years ago


Ely Cohn
Immediately obvious this isn't house orange. Deep and grippy.
Burnt orange sunset with handles to grasp. Sour apricots and juicy peaches dance around minty basil and tarragon.
— 6 months ago