Full Review

Lenz

Lenz
2010 Old Vines Selection, Merlot, Long Island

Pair this wine with:
Beef Cheese Pasta Pork

Category: Merlot

Date Tasted:
Country: USA
Alcohol: 13%
88 Points
Silver Medal
Highly Recommended
$175

Lenz
2010 Old Vines Selection, Merlot, Long Island

Pair this wine with:
Beef Cheese Pasta Pork

Category: Merlot

Date Tasted:
Country: USA
Alcohol: 13%
Dark garnet color. Aromas and flavors of black plum, leather and cedar cigar box, chocolate pastries, and black tea with a velvety, tangy, dry medium body and a warming, interesting, medium-long finish that shows notes of sandalwood, black tea and mushrooms, and dried lilacs with medium, chewy tannins and light oak flavor. Fascinating with great depth and complexity; there is New World ripeness and the Old World acid and structure with herbaceousness tied together with balanced oak and aging.

Tasting Info

Wine Glass Style: Spicy & Complex
Aroma Aroma: black plum, leather and cedar cigar box, chocolate pastries, and black tea
Taste Flavor: Same as aromas with notes of sandalwood, black tea and mushrooms, and dried lilacs
Sweetness Sweetness: Dry
Enjoy Enjoy: Now on its own
Recipes Pairing: Baked Ham, Meat Loaf, Lasagna
Bottom Line Bottom Line: Fascinating with great depth and complexity; there is New World ripeness and the Old World acid and structure with herbaceousness tied together with balanced oak and aging.

The Producer

Lenz Winery

The Producer
PO Box 28
Peconic, NY 11958
USA
1 631-734-6010

Merlot

Wine Glass Cabernet.jpg
Serve in a Cabernet Wine Glass
Merlot is a red variety that is loved by consumers, yet often shunned by certain wine gurus and critics, as they perceive these wines as “little sisters” to the more powerful Cabernet Sauvignon. Yet on its own, the best examples of Merlot are multi-layered, complex wines that are among the finest in the world.

Merlot has many similar flavors to Cabernet Sauvignon, especially with its cherry and plum fruit, but is has fewer, less sharp tannins than Cabernet Sauvignon. Many producers whether in Bordeaux, America, Chile or elsewhere, often blend small percentages of Merlot into Cabernet Sauvignon to lessen the tannic bitterness of the latter.

A few districts in France’s Bordeaux region, namely Pomerol, are home to the greatest examples of Merlot. Chateau Petrus is the world’s most famous example of Merlot, a powerful wine that ages beautifully for 30 or 40 years in the best vintages. There are also celebrated examples from American, especially in Washington’s Walla Walla valley as well as in Napa Valley in California. Merlot is also very successful in Chile, New Zealand and even in certain part of Italy.

Merlot pairs best with foods such as lamb or veal, but it also sought out by consumers to accompany steaks and roast when they want a rounder, more elegant red wine.