I did this in 2012. It was the night that we beat Bama. I had to stop by the hotel bar on the way in and have two glasses of Scotch to calm my nerves. and by glasses, I effectively mean shots. It was a fun night, football aside. The wines were fun and people were great. The Lamborn family remembered us so we chatted with them for a while. They are always a blast.htxag09 said:
Howell Mountain tastings in Texas
Planning on attending the Houston one. Anyone else?
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Rivers Marie, Myriad, Lancaster, and Realm are a few of my favorites...
I also tend to buy wines made by a particular winemaker with Mike Smith, Thomas Brown, and Aaron Pott being three I really respect.
And that's the way I tend to think about it. I'm not necessarily buying them to sit in the dark somewhere. I want to enjoy them with good friends.aggiejumper said:
I don't know how y'all figured out all the analytics on CellarTracker. I will play with it more and am curious how my bottle count has grown. If I figure this out I'll post it.
Bottle value is hard to determine; it's only worth what a real buyer is willing to pay. Wine is rarely an investment and is nearly always a hobby. I have bottles that are not worth a lot but carry great sentimental value. I'll pass on what exact bottles and values I have as it's not important; I enjoy wine in the time and place and with the company I'm in, not because it's an expensive bottle.
aggiejumper said:
I don't know how y'all figured out all the analytics on CellarTracker.
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Bottle value is hard to determine
Man, I wish! If we drank 240 a year, I'd likely have CPS here. 4 kids from 2-14 tends to limit our drinking a bit.cecil77 said:
This talk of celllar size is simpler if we just get the tape measure and drop trou, right?
200 bottles in stock right now. We drink through 240ish per year so over the past four years the math is pretty easy. Most were daily drinkers. Of the 200 about 2/3 is cellared, the rest just to drink.
Empty nest and now they're all out of college and on their own. So splitting a bottle most nights per week is the norm. Throw in some special occasions and guest and it adds up.Quote:
Man, I wish! If we drank 240 a year, I'd likely have CPS here. 4 kids from 2-14 tends to limit our drinking a bit.
Us as well. I just didn't want to be the first to say so...Quote:
I'd have to guess 300 bottles.
Great, now we are all going to spend the next hour analyzing your drinking habits!HTownAg98 said:
Likewise. This was empty on January 1.
Most people will read that website and look at the cost to determine their favourite wine.Thriller said:And that's the way I tend to think about it. I'm not necessarily buying them to sit in the dark somewhere. I want to enjoy them with good friends.aggiejumper said:
I don't know how y'all figured out all the analytics on CellarTracker. I will play with it more and am curious how my bottle count has grown. If I figure this out I'll post it.
Bottle value is hard to determine; it's only worth what a real buyer is willing to pay. Wine is rarely an investment and is nearly always a hobby. I have bottles that are not worth a lot but carry great sentimental value. I'll pass on what exact bottles and values I have as it's not important; I enjoy wine in the time and place and with the company I'm in, not because it's an expensive bottle.
speaking of cheap daily drinkers, I think we've drank close to a case recently of the 2014 Eve chardonnay. I think it is under $10 at HEB. really nice chard expression, IMO.cecil77 said:Us as well. I just didn't want to be the first to say so...Quote:
I'd have to guess 300 bottles.