| Classification | |
| Type | Rouge |
| Marque | Chateau Latour |
| Millésime | 1990 |
| Pays | France |
| Région principale | Bordeaux |
| Région | Pauillac |
| Cépage | Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Bordeaux Blend |
| Volume | 0,75 |
| État | Parfait |
| Étiquette | Parfait |
| Consommable | -2035 |
| Stock | 0 |
This is a beauty, but not the awesome blockbuster I remembered. There is a roasted, earthy, hot year character with extremely low acidity, fleshy, seductive, opulently-textured flavors, and a full-bodied finish with considerable amounts of glycerin and tannin. The wine was sweet, accessible, and seductive on the attack, but it closed down in the mouth. Interestingly, when I previously tasted this wine (about six months ago) from a bottle in my cellar, I found it to be impenetrable, needing at least 6-10 years of further cellaring. Based on this example from the Chateau's cellar, it could be drunk now. In any event, it will last 25-30 years, but is it the immortal classic many observers, including myself, thought it was?
This is one of my favorite wines ever. Full-bodied, with layers of silky fruit and masses of currant, mineral and berry character. Amazing. It's a wine with perfect structure, perfect strength. It's 1961 Latour in modern clothes. It's hard not to drink it now. '89/'90 Bordeaux non-blind horizontal.
Rene Gabriel rates this wine 20/20 points.
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