What style is it?
cecil77 said:
What style is it?
YouBet said:
I'm going to pollute this thread and proclaim the 2021 Hess Family Select Pinot Noir from Central Coast is an absolutly incredible wine for $13. One of the best values I've found in many years. Highly recommend if you just want a daily Pinot and not looking to open the really good stuff.
JCA1 said:
I've always thought the Hess Allomi cab for $25 is a decent everyday drinker.
QBCade said:JCA1 said:
I've always thought the Hess Allomi cab for $25 is a decent everyday drinker.
For a lower priced everyday Cab, I like The Calling.
752bro4 said:QBCade said:JCA1 said:
I've always thought the Hess Allomi cab for $25 is a decent everyday drinker.
For a lower priced everyday Cab, I like The Calling.
Hello friends
Alexander Valley Vineyards is the best $20-$25 +/- wine that I have found so far.QBCade said:JCA1 said:
I've always thought the Hess Allomi cab for $25 is a decent everyday drinker.
For a lower priced everyday Cab, I like The Calling.
If Canadian liquor stores that list sugar content are accurate, Austin Hope absolutely adds sugar.cecil77 said:
I had Roth at the winery a few years back and would get in in a club shipment occasionally, the one they sent we didn't care for.
Are any of these less expensive wines truly dry? All the ones I've tried recently (including an Austin Hope that my BIL ordered at dinner recently) are palpably sweet, e.g. I would bet the Austin Hope had added sugar.
Is the grocery store margin really that high?cecil77 said:
$20 cab at HEB
HEB gets $8.
Distributor gets $7.
That leaves five bucks to make wine, buy a bottle, label, cork and capsule. Fill it, sparge it, cork it, label it and put it in a cardboard box. So the wine in that bottle cost what? 2-3 bucks? Which is why there's considerably manipulation (I could taste oak powder in that Austin Hope, at least I think I could) including IMO, added sugar.
None of those wines are produced by the label on the front. Most are "vinted by" bottled by" or "cellared by".
It's not always an indication of quality, but I look for "produced by on the label" which is the pre-fermentation term.
No clue on HEB. That seems steep.cecil77 said:
I am told that HEB is. Maybe someone else can confirm or correct?
Teach me Cecil-won.cecil77 said:
$20 cab at HEB
HEB gets $8.
Distributor gets $7.
That leaves five bucks to make wine, buy a bottle, label, cork and capsule. Fill it, sparge it, cork it, label it and put it in a cardboard box. So the wine in that bottle cost what? 2-3 bucks? Which is why there's considerably manipulation (I could taste oak powder in that Austin Hope, at least I think I could) including IMO, added sugar.
None of those wines are produced by the label on the front. Most are "vinted by" bottled by" or "cellared by".
It's not always an indication of quality, but I look for "produced by on the label" which is the pre-fermentation term.
Even looking at labels only tells you so much. Takes a little more getting to know the wineries or brands yourself on the side to understand where your money is going.Objective Aggie said:Teach me Cecil-won.cecil77 said:
$20 cab at HEB
HEB gets $8.
Distributor gets $7.
That leaves five bucks to make wine, buy a bottle, label, cork and capsule. Fill it, sparge it, cork it, label it and put it in a cardboard box. So the wine in that bottle cost what? 2-3 bucks? Which is why there's considerably manipulation (I could taste oak powder in that Austin Hope, at least I think I could) including IMO, added sugar.
None of those wines are produced by the label on the front. Most are "vinted by" bottled by" or "cellared by".
It's not always an indication of quality, but I look for "produced by on the label" which is the pre-fermentation term.
How do I tell who produces each wine and how do I know good from bad? Because I am trying to educate myself on avoiding manipulated wines.
cecil77 said:
"produced by" on the back label indicates that the grapes were fermented by the winery on the label.
All other terms, bottled, cellared, vinted, are post fermentation terms, i.e. the winery purchased wine (i.e. bulk) from somewhere. Note there is an obscure term "made by" which is also pre-fermentation but it's rare.
As to quality, honestly, it like the saying in horse racing: "The race doesn't always go to the fastest horse.... But that's the way to bet."
For wine it's "The more expensive wine isn't always better, but that's the way to bet."
Also tastes changes, 10 years ago I thought huge extracted black current pudding laced with vanilla Napa cabs were great, and spent quite bit of money on them. Now they're in the chiller likely to never be consumed, as my wife and I really don't care for them now.
So I guess the answer is "spend more and drink more". (only slightly kidding)
Speaking of that, I've got a couple cases (total) of Realm, Myriad and Carter that I wouldn't mind passing on to someone who would enjoy them. I'd just want what I paid...
Dang. If I didnt live halfway across the country I might jump on that.cecil77 said:
Speaking of that, I've got a couple cases (total) of Realm, Myriad and Carter that I wouldn't mind passing on to someone who would enjoy them. I'd just want what I paid...
I agree with all of that, thanks for taking the time.Chipotlemonger said:Even looking at labels only tells you so much. Takes a little more getting to know the wineries or brands yourself on the side to understand where your money is going.Objective Aggie said:Teach me Cecil-won.cecil77 said:
$20 cab at HEB
HEB gets $8.
Distributor gets $7.
That leaves five bucks to make wine, buy a bottle, label, cork and capsule. Fill it, sparge it, cork it, label it and put it in a cardboard box. So the wine in that bottle cost what? 2-3 bucks? Which is why there's considerably manipulation (I could taste oak powder in that Austin Hope, at least I think I could) including IMO, added sugar.
None of those wines are produced by the label on the front. Most are "vinted by" bottled by" or "cellared by".
It's not always an indication of quality, but I look for "produced by on the label" which is the pre-fermentation term.
How do I tell who produces each wine and how do I know good from bad? Because I am trying to educate myself on avoiding manipulated wines.
Also, I am guessing you mean manipulated in a way as to appeal to the masses and/or cover up poorer grape quality or tough vintages. As cecil said, generally you can get what you pay for to a certain extent. There is definitely a tapering though in bang for your buck after a bit. That all being said, I bet you can find $20 wines that are less manipulated than some $75 wines, so you need to be very specific about what you don't want in your mind, and what you mean by manipulated.
Getting on a soapbox for a minute. I appreciate wines grown/made in the vineyard, and letting the vineyard sites speak, but I also appreciate work in the cellar. I get a chuckle when winemakers espouse doing as little as possible. If that were the case, why do you even need a winemaker? Not all manipulation is created the same, and manipulation is such a strong word for some of what winemaking really is. To rack a wine or do a pump over is technically manipulation, but would you rather have wines that were cloudy from not racking or were not fully realized in terms of flavor and fruit extraction because they weren't pumped over just for the sake of not being manipulated?*
*Yes I am generalizing here and amazing wines are made with different approaches. My main point I wanted to make is that not all winemaking or manipulation is some guy dropping in some some stuff in a labcoat.
One last point, winery size is not a causation of, if I can put words in your mouth, negative manipulation, even though it might be correlated. There are wines from big producers I much prefer to similar priced wines from smaller producers. The bigger guys can make some amazing stuff at a lesser cost due to efficiencies that is just as good if not better than Harry and Sally down on their farm. Just depends on what you, the consumer, are looking for and what kind of wine you like!
yeah, that seems high to me, but I don't have much insight into HEB/box store costs/marginChipotlemonger said:No clue on HEB. That seems steep.cecil77 said:
I am told that HEB is. Maybe someone else can confirm or correct?
Also I would bet it's not a straight percentage of sticker price across the board for them on wine. As the wines get more expensive I'd warrant they are taking less of a cut. e.g. in your stated example $8 on a $20 bottle but maybe just $20 on a $60 bottle and not $24 (completely making numbers up).
Are you sure? I have been burned with a mystery bottle offering before.BigAg95 said:
FYI, Last Bottle is selling 2017 Beringer Steinhauer Ranch cab for $59 today. Solid reviews/scores for a 2017, and normally runs $150