Let this sit about 3-4 years too long. So yeasty, well past its prime. added OJ in hopes to make it drinkable, and was the worst thing I've tried since Jeppson's Malört.
Is Schramsberg great? I'm asking in relation to real Champagne. Do you drink both and find the domestic juice holds its own?Chipotlemonger said:
Was it corked you think? Just surprised at that development. I agree on Schramsberg, they're great.
yeah I thought it was an interesting interview, enjoyed itcecil77 said:
Dan Gatlin podcast. It's over an hour long...
Dan Gatlin's Dogged Quest for Quality at Inwood Estates Winery
I'm biased of course, but it's a fun listen.
With the amount of different wines out there from the same area nowadays, I don't think you can hold a one size fits all solution on a lot of wines (e.g. Napa cab).bularry said:
looking at the above lists and various vintages got me wondering
what age does everyone enjoy drinking specific varietals of wines? What is your Napa preference or other cab/bordeaux blends? cali chard? burgundy? etc.
I don't know that I have any iron clad preferences, personally. We drink a lot of chardonnay from SBC and I find them hitting a very nice spot after about 3 years, but had some older that were really interesting. so 19's and 20's right now hitting the first window.
I haven't found much benefit to letting my Sonoma/NorCal pinots get age. I don't have a lot of experience, but haven't ever found growing nuance or complexity with 7 or 8 years... maybe that's not old enough?
I've got some Zin from 15-19 from Napa, sonoma, paso, etc plus one older Napa zin from 04. I'm trying to hold all of them and going to do some aged zin tastings in a few years... assuming I don't die before thenChipotlemonger said:
Yep 7-10 for a good Cab is great.
I've never drink much old Burgundy, or much of any Burgundy for that matter. I'm sure it's good though and there's a reason older ones can fetch a pretty penny.
Zinfandel I have heard can age well, but I've personally never had older Zin.
BSD said:
20+ years for champagne.
Great stuff here, and agreed. Fascinating indeed!bularry said:
But i think everyone has in their head when they expect to drink wines they have stored. For instance I just bought some '19 Monte Bello. It might be great right now, no idea, but I ain't opening one to find out. I'm gonna wait those suckers out.
I opened a '13 Brunello not long ago and it was pretty "okay" on night one. 24 hours later it was a much better drinking experience. Did I open it too young or would it have been the same result in 10 years? No idea, just glad I kept it another night!
wine is pretty fascinating
Do you have any MOX literature or stats on hand? # of producers, which producers, etc.? Might it also be vintage specific? Depending on the growing season, someone could choose to use it as a tool or not. But us consumers would be none the wiser unless told so.cecil77 said:
For fun we might open four vintages of Cos d'Estournel to see if we can tell when MOX started. I've got 05, 09, 14 and 17 so that might be an interesting exercise...
Chipotlemonger said:Do you have any MOX literature or stats on hand? # of producers, which producers, etc.? Might it also be vintage specific? Depending on the growing season, someone could choose to use it as a tool or not. But us consumers would be none the wiser unless told so.cecil77 said:
For fun we might open four vintages of Cos d'Estournel to see if we can tell when MOX started. I've got 05, 09, 14 and 17 so that might be an interesting exercise...