I had the 2013 Anthem Beckstoffer Las Piedras cab tonight. Solid. Good QPR at $60 from WTSO.
jh0400 said:
Are these shareable? I'd like to do one of these one day, but my wife never wants her own tasting. We usually share as it extends the day.
RangerRick9211 said:
Oof. CMS just ripped the pins from the latest class of Masters: https://www.mastersommeliers.org/press/court-master-sommeliers-americas-board-directors-takes-unanimous-actions-preserve-integrity
One of them was a Houston MS who was on the last test before resetting a second time. Brutal.
Wife and I are heading to Napa next week, and I am really excited about my Outpost appt. Also doing Hourglass, Raymond, Quintessa, Cimarossa, and Failia, among others.BigAg95 said:
Well done!
We went out for a dry aged ribeye Saturday and took our own bottle - 2014 Outpost Howell Mountain zin. It was nice, had a lot going on for a zin - soft tannins, black fruit, licorice, tea, and pepper. It was also pretty subtle for a Napa wine (and particularly for a zin), if it were a blind tasting I would have guessed it was a bordeaux.
That's great info, thanks STX. I saw some internet articles on Uber Wine, but was wondering why it hadn't been mentioned on this thread. Day 2 of my trip is winery heavy, so Uber Wine sounds like an intriguing option. If it works out I'll post about my experience.SouthTex99 said:
I am also planning a Napa trip for November. Spoke to two wineries about UberWine and they've never heard of it. They told me many people use Uber, they are plentiful. But if you have appointments to make sometimes they are slow to respond. The majority still use limos and private driving services.
Problem with UberWine is it doesn't show up as an option on your app until you are in the region. So if you want to book a driver a month out I haven't figured out that it's doable if you are out of area. If you figure that out I'd love to hear about that. I think it would cost about half of what a driving service would, but the driver may not be as knowledgeable or interesting. You do, after all, spend a good amount of time with your driver. I think that's worth some money for a good one.
Dan Gatlin is the owner and wine maker. I'm just a friend who gets to hang out there weekends the past three years! Also, get to be a cellar rat at times, punch downs, bottling, and (most importantly) barrel sampling.Cyp0111 said:
So- is the winery yours or an investor? Very cool, nonetheless.
Yeah made me realize how much wine I bought and forgot about...Stagecoach said:
Lot of shipping notices the past few days
So true.FarmerJohn said:
We are expecting. While I guess that doesn't rule me out, it's just not as much fun to open something interesting without a partner in crime.
FarmerJohn said:
We are expecting. While I guess that doesn't rule me out, it's just not as much fun to open something interesting without a partner in crime.
FarmerJohn said:
We are expecting. While I guess that doesn't rule me out, it's just not as much fun to open something interesting without a partner in crime.
FarmerJohn said:
Shipping notices are like the first rumbles of the wine-valanche. An uptick in memberships followed by a downtick in consumption suddenly makes me think I may have bit off more than I can chew.
But then I think, "Hey, it keeps!" and all is right again.
I'm far from an expert so I'm looking forward to responses.752bro4 said:
About 6 months ago, we bought a 80 or so bottle fridge that we were going to start cellaring some bottles in. Since then, we've been to Napa twice, and subsequently joined 5 additional clubs. I find myself out of room, already. I'm going to have to re-organize things and figure this out as a bunch of shipments will be here within the next few weeks.
We had been keeping just wines that we planned on drinking 5+ years out from now in the fridge, and keeping < 5 year wines in racks in a guestroom closet. May need another rack, another closet, or start looking into offsite.
Do you guys cellar/keep chilled everything or just anything that's 5 years out? And when you have multiple of things, how are you spacing them out for popping corks? Any other way to look at organizing and storing them?
I think, living up here, humidity would be my biggest problem, but isn't that alleviated by storing the bottles laying on the side and keeping the cork moist that way?cecil77 said:
Several thoughts:
As long as the environment is temperature stable, anything room temp is fine for 5 year type storage. Temp delta is the killer. Expansion, contraction can loosen the cork. Given that, bottom of your bedroom closet is a good spot. Stable temp, dark, keeps wine out of your reach when you want that 2nd (or 3rd) bottle on a Saturday night.
For long storage, a chiller is best, of course, but not mandatory. One proviso of chillers for long term storage is to monitor humidity. Low humidity can dry out the cork. Anything above 40% is ok, official recommendations are more like 60-80%. For chillers w/out humidity control, I used a dense sponge (like a grouting sponge) sitting in a pan of water in each chiller.
As to "which wines to cellar?" - a couple more thoughts:
Most modern wine isn't gonna degrade over 5 or so years, the question is which ones will improve over 5, 10 or more years. Price can be an indicator, reviews probably a better one. And well aged wine is a different experience than (to channel Navin R. Johnson) fresh wine. Not everyone prefers it.