How did the virtual tasting work? Everybody agree to buy the same bottles or did you distribute wine so there would be fewer left open?
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What's year was the Rising Tides, and how was it?
I'm always afraid to wait "a few years" for fear that I'll wait too long and it'll go bad and ruin. One winery told me that they use "7 year corks" if that's even a thing, and that after that time the corks will shrink or split or something and the wine will go bad.big-ag said:Quote:
What's year was the Rising Tides, and how was it?
2016. Decanted for about 6 hours. Was fantastic.
Have another bottle that I'll revisit in a few years.
I thought that might be the case. I seem to remember thinking they want their wines to be drunk pretty soon rather than letting them age awhile.cecil77 said:
Yes, it's a thing. Best corks in the world are about 20 year corks. Bordeaux first growths are routinely recorked due to cork age. That being said, a 7 year cork isn't that high of quality, usually cork quality and bottle price go together.
A crumbled cork does not necessarily mean the wine is bad or corked.greenband said:
We opened a 1999 Frog's Leap Cabernet last night (1.5 liter).
The cork was toast and crumbled trying to take it out. Before throwing away we decided to taste and it was outstanding. That's almost never the case in my experience.
Austintm said:A crumbled cork does not necessarily mean the wine is bad or corked.greenband said:
We opened a 1999 Frog's Leap Cabernet last night (1.5 liter).
The cork was toast and crumbled trying to take it out. Before throwing away we decided to taste and it was outstanding. That's almost never the case in my experience.
By the way, for older wines get this:
https://thedurand.com/
big-ag said:Quote:
What's year was the Rising Tides, and how was it?
2016. Decanted for about 6 hours. Was fantastic.
Have another bottle that I'll revisit in a few years.
I love Rosso's as well! Reineri Rosso is a go to for me, it's available at Total Winejh0400 said:
We opened a 2017 Capanna Rosso di Montalcino tonight. For a wine in the $30 range, rossos might be my favorite.
Yes, but I can pretty much assure that the small production high-end producers (at least the ones I buy from) aren't going that directioncecil77 said:
Thanks for posting that.
That's a description of a large production type winery. There are "drop in the tank" devices now making MicroOx much more widely available to smaller winemakers.
It's not an attack. It is a statement. He is directly calling into question the business practices of others in a thinly veiled "I know some are doing it," which is unnecessary. That is an irresponsible statement that should not be made. What Cecil does, and continues to want to do, is make his case for why Texas wines are equal to or better than Napa. I have no problem with him sharing that opinion or believing it.greenband said:
Austintm - you are out of line in my opinion. He didn't name any wineries by name so business libel is impossible. cecil77 gave his opinion, which I certainly appreciate on this forum. He adds a ton a value.
I don't agree with every opinion, but this forum suffers when we attack others for no reason.