(Domaine de la Romanée-Conti, Romanée-St-Vivant Grand Cru, Burgundy, France, Red) Good colour. Better than the Richebourg. Lovely nose. Pure and succulent. Ripe and round but fresh and vigorous for a 2007. Fullish body, ample and velvety on the palate. Good grip. This is complex and very elegant. Lovely finish. Very fine. (Drink starting 2016)Decanter | 95 DEC(Domaine de la Romanée-Conti Romanée St.-Vivant Grand Cru Red) An ultra elegant, pure and quite delicately fruited and spiced nose that is extremely fresh, floral and expansive that is more layered still as it introduces seductively textured, detailed and gorgeously delineated middle weight flavors that possess laser-like focus if less density than is usually seen with this wine. Indeed, this is rather like a ballerina with limited power and weight but the watch word here is purity, purity and purity. I quite like this but it will strike some as unduly light though I believe the underlying material is present such that it will add weight in bottle as it ages. (Drink starting 2019)Burghound | 94 BH(Romanée- St.-Vivant- Domaine de la Romanée-Conti) The 2007 RSV is equally refined and perfumed on the nose, as it soars from the glass in a beautiful blend of raspberries, coffee, cherries, a touch of cocoa, blood orange, great minerality and vanillin oak. On the palate the wine is fullish, deep and rock solid at the core, with beautiful focus and balance, fine-grained tannins, tangy acids and simply profound intensity and grip on the very long backend. A stellar vintage of Romanée- St.-Vivant. (Drink between 2013-2045)John Gilman | 94 JGVery together, revealing pure floral, strawberry and raspberry aromas and flavors. Refined, balanced and harmonious, with the firm structure showing on the lingering mineral finish. I prefer this to the Richebourg today.--Non-blind 2007 DRC tasting (February 2010). Best from 2014 through 2030.Wine Spectator | 94 WSThe Domaine’s 2007 Romanee-St.-Vivant predictably inhabits a different world – not to mention being in a different league of complexity and intrigue – from their Echezeaux, Grands Echezeaux, or Richebourg of that vintage. Peat, leather, humus, forest floor, and decadent floral perfume are joined by an oceanic saline, alkaline, kelp-tinged aspect, and these surf-and-turf aspects follow on a polished palate that – despite only the slightest nod in the direction of overt fruitiness by way of dark berries – nevertheless displays a mouth-watering juiciness to accompany its myriad mineral and organic complexities. A persistently satisfying and thought-provoking finish points to the likelihood of 12-15 years continuance.Robert Parker Wine Advocate | 93 RP