bularry said:none of those were more than $50?Quote:
I have had some Aloxe Corton, Volnay, and Pommard before and never has them next to each other to compare.
I didn't pay
bularry said:none of those were more than $50?Quote:
I have had some Aloxe Corton, Volnay, and Pommard before and never has them next to each other to compare.
bularry said:none of those were more than $50?Quote:
I have had some Aloxe Corton, Volnay, and Pommard before and never has them next to each other to compare.
GBMont3 said:
I bought the prop red and the "new" cab last week. Love the prop red.
Yea that is steep. So much great Pinot out there for less than half of that!FTAco07 said:
Just got the offering for my favorite Oregon Pinot and they've upped the price to $210/bottle. I love the wine but really struggle with paying that.
Chipotlemonger said:Yea that is steep. So much great Pinot out there for less than half of that!FTAco07 said:
Just got the offering for my favorite Oregon Pinot and they've upped the price to $210/bottle. I love the wine but really struggle with paying that.
Why William and Mary was the first allocation I've bought this year.....$95-$125/bottle....never thought that price would be "reasonable"cecil77 said:Chipotlemonger said:Yea that is steep. So much great Pinot out there for less than half of that!FTAco07 said:
Just got the offering for my favorite Oregon Pinot and they've upped the price to $210/bottle. I love the wine but really struggle with paying that.
A $300 cab is common in Napa now. At some point the buying public has to just stop paying.
You can get so much good aged wine now for less money.
You should check out Anakota (Knights Valley, Sonoma)FTAco07 said:
I am still a bit intimidated by BDX and my knowledge is nowhere near up to snuff beyond the handful of really famous labels. That said, about six months ago I realized that almost all of my favorite Napa wines are made by French winemakers.
cecil77 said:
I buy little new Napa wine anymore, my palate has move away from Napa stye. My new wine is almost all Bdx. Still buy Piper, quit Spottswoode when they went woke.
gonemaroon said:
I'm placing an order of wine (I'm in France) and the place has wines that are 100 years old to current.
I've never really drank anything say older than a 1990 bottle. Is it worth exploring? It looks like the prices and ratings aren't blow out years but the wine is very aged. They recommended some bottles from the 70's and 80's are those playing with fire? I hate to waste money verses buying stuff that is from the 90's that I know will drink.
This is a wine store brought to me by someone who's a real wine guy, so I know the store is legit as is their storage and purchasing programs.
Quote:
I have a lot more faith that what I'm drinking has not been artificially enhanced.
htxag09 said:
Anyone buying William and Mary today? First allocation I'm considering actually purchasing this year....
Not in your area, but one of our favorites is Venge. jot it down when you are up towards Castiloga sometime.East Dallas Ag said:
Looking for new Napa vineyards recs, will not be there too long (1/2 day, full day, morning then back to SMF) so looking to maximize quantity along with the quality. Not really looking for the 2-3+hr tasting experiences. We'll be staying in Yountville and don't want to waste much time driving so looking to keep things from Napa to St. Helena. Will be starting the 1st 1/2 day in downtown Napa so considering running over to Palmaz and then heading north, any experiences with Palmaz, have heard its a cool visit.
We'll probably have to make a quick stop at Silver Oak at some point for sentimental reasons, so another option along Oakville Cross might be good.
Good chance we make another stop at Chappellet, so another option along Sage Canyon would be useful.
We do like options where we can taste outside with a view over just a tasting room. I will typically buy some bottles from where we stop (especially if it gets the tasting comped), but I'm also not looking to drop $1k+ per stop, so if it's the type of mom & pop shop with high end wine and you're expected to drop some coin for opening their doors for you, that's not for us.
Here's the places we've been, so looking for recs outside of these:
Chappellet
Heitz
Duckhorn
Merryvale
Alpha Omega
Fleury Estate
Stuhlmuller
Preston family
Inglenook
Sullivan
Darioush
Clos du Val
Robert Sinskey
O'Brien
Silver Oak
Plumpjack
Caymus
Mumm
aggiecive said:
Chase Cellars and Anomaly are must go-tos if I go to Napa.
We always prefer small private tastings. Just a more relaxing environment - especially as my wife is an introvert!Goose06 said:
Haven't been since Covid but before Covid these places were all private tastings as opposed to a big tasting room with 2 dozen people. Personally, I find that far more enjoyable of an experience versus going somewhere more commercial.
It's changed a ton in the past few years, in a lot of different ways.Goose06 said:aggiecive said:
Chase Cellars and Anomaly are must go-tos if I go to Napa.
Haven't been since Covid but before Covid these places were all private tastings as opposed to a big tasting room with 2 dozen people. Personally, I find that far more enjoyable of an experience versus going somewhere more commercial.
Oh definitely. It's always been the majority, but now it's a mega-majority. I should have been more clear. Believe pre-COVID to now the % of reservation only has jumped from something in the high 60% range to the 90+% range.htxag09 said:
Haven't most Napa cellars been appointment only since even before COVID?
That makes sense.Chipotlemonger said:Oh definitely. It's always been the majority, but now it's a mega-majority. I should have been more clear. Believe pre-COVID to now the % of reservation only has jumped from something in the high 60% range to the 90+% range.htxag09 said:
Haven't most Napa cellars been appointment only since even before COVID?
As for the permitting, that stuff is a mess. I don't think it has as much to do with the reservation vs. no reservation aspect though. Wineries can throttle walk up traffic, reservation or no, with wait times or refusing service. It is easier to pre-throttle it with reservations.
Permits and local regulations make the # of big events limited and greatly limits post 5 or 6 pm events (depending on town in valley).
Bingocecil77 said:
Tastings, per se, are tough to generate profit. The entire point of a tasting is to sell wine. I'll take one whale over a dozen bachelorette groups.
Higher end tastings sell higher end wine.