Help me out. What and where are you getting aged bottles at sane prices?cecil77 said:
I'm not interested in aging wine much. Too many great 20+ year old bottles available (mostly BDX for me) of great wine that's still at sane prices.
Help me out. What and where are you getting aged bottles at sane prices?cecil77 said:
I'm not interested in aging wine much. Too many great 20+ year old bottles available (mostly BDX for me) of great wine that's still at sane prices.
I went to Bergrstrom several years ago, really liked the visit. They make hella good chardonnays.mpl35 said:
I've been to Bergstrom and Soter. Soter was fancier. Bergstrom I like the wines better. But fun stops.
We dropped into Avidity Wines and it was very relaxing, low key, and nice views. It was good and I recommend for a quick visit.
Blakeslee was a beautiful little property with a nice view too. It was one of our firsts stops in the valley so I don't recall the wine as well.
Ayoub - great wine. Weird tasting in that it's the owner and you in his kitchen. Still his rose was great as were his Pinots
BSD said:
Que es?
I'm taking a 2009 Chteau Brane-Cantenac to a dinner tonight for friends. The only other time I've had this label i was really impressed with the quality at the price point. Almost like a baby Ch. Margaux.
aggiejumper said:
Wow, a Napa cab you don't know.
QB Cade going deep into the pre-Constellation Prisoner portfolio.
How is it? Still ripe but rounding out now? Smooth but higher ABV?
cecil77 said:
Yes, mediocre QPR IMO, but save the Dime!
WestUAg said:
I just looked and it's listed for $170! Give me
Some Greer or Roy Piper at that price . Could buy 3 bottles of Frogs Leap Estate Cab for that. So many great options at or below that price. But it's always cool to try old bottles and see where they go.
QBCade said:cecil77 said:
Yes, mediocre QPR IMO, but save the Dime!
Yes. At that price point, frankly hard to beat Beringer Private Reserve
JCA1 said:QBCade said:cecil77 said:
Yes, mediocre QPR IMO, but save the Dime!
Yes. At that price point, frankly hard to beat Beringer Private Reserve
Bought a 3 bottle vertical of Private reserve on lastbottle about 6 months ago. I've only opened the '17, but thought it was quite good.
QBCade said:JCA1 said:QBCade said:cecil77 said:
Yes, mediocre QPR IMO, but save the Dime!
Yes. At that price point, frankly hard to beat Beringer Private Reserve
Bought a 3 bottle vertical of Private reserve on lastbottle about 6 months ago. I've only opened the '17, but thought it was quite good.
2013 and 2016 are really good.
Objective Aggie said:
Also. My wine journey notes so far would be
* there's a minimal threshold to getting enjoyable wine. The cheap sugared up stuff is almost more like Pepsi. Once you rise above that you can find enjoyable wines in all price points.
* Pinot Noir has been something that has scored well. Might h lo that my girlfriend has appreciated them too. But in many settings I find them balanced but with enough complexity. I had a Frank Family that was quite the crowd pleaser.
* I've gotten addicted to a Cab Franc but my research said these are all over the place but the one I've discovered is crisp.
* man, cheap Chardonnay ruins what Chardonnay is supposed to be. Flowers Chardonnay or even the old school cakebrrad or whatnot can be a really nice refreshing experience.
* Italian wines are less sweet. Way more affordable in most cases. Took a wine class and man their branding and naming is confusing but a nice brunello or Montepulciano Nobile or whatever can hit the spot and they are rarely crazy expensive.
* decanting actually makes a big difference.
* knowledgeable wine friends are easy to learn from but many people are just basic it turns out.
* serving temp makes a noticeable difference. A cab at room temperature is no where near as clean as a properly chilled version.
Best wine thus far has been The Mascot 2017.
Again I realize there's more I don't know than I do know but this is fun.
* That may be a more popular opinion on this board than you think. And I would extend it to $250 Napa cabs and some even higher than that. "too" is also exactly how I describe them. Over ripeness and overextraction can mask subtle clonal differences (similar to an amp clipping to where the music just becomes noise) - IMO it's why you can throw a blanket over many high dollar Napa cabs - they just taste very similar. A $40-80 Premier Cru from St Emilion can be a tremendous bargain.Quote:
It's an unpopular opinion on this board, but I really don't love the 75-125 Napa cabs I have had. They are good, but I find them too much. Too much alcohol, too bold, too fruit driven. Just not my pallet I think. Of course there are exceptions, to this, but often times I'd rather have a smart buy from BDX in the 40-60 range than the Napa Valley 100/btl.
Absolutely! But it changes with time and budget. My buy in used to be $30-ish. It's quite a bit higher now, but I'm on the old side (i.e. I know I'm not gonna die broke) so the money spends more easily. And the thrill of finding a quality but inexpensive wine also tails off. It's the old story of the guy who says "I found a $20 wine as good as your $100 bottle!" and his friend replies "well yeah, but you had to buy 8 different bottles to find it."Quote:
there's a minimal threshold to getting enjoyable wine. The cheap sugared up stuff is almost more like Pepsi. Once you rise above that you can find enjoyable wines in all price points.
cecil77 said:
Wow, lots of good thoughts.
Several comments, in no particular order:
* Serving temperature - too cold and retro-nasal shuts down (like tasting when you have a cold), too warm and alcohol volatizes giving acrid smell. One thing though is to recognize the difference between taste and the sensation of being refreshed (cool/cold drink on a warm day). I think many people drink their wines (both red and white) too cold because it's refreshing. But yeah, "room temperature" should never have been a thing, rather "cellar temperature".* That may be a more popular opinion on this board than you think. And I would extend it to $250 Napa cabs and some even higher than that. "too" is also exactly how I describe them. Over ripeness and overextraction can mask subtle clonal differences (similar to an amp clipping to where the music just becomes noise) - IMO it's why you can throw a blanket over many high dollar Napa cabs - they just taste very similar. A $40-80 Premier Cru from St Emilion can be a tremendous bargain.Quote:
It's an unpopular opinion on this board, but I really don't love the 75-125 Napa cabs I have had. They are good, but I find them too much. Too much alcohol, too bold, too fruit driven. Just not my pallet I think. Of course there are exceptions, to this, but often times I'd rather have a smart buy from BDX in the 40-60 range than the Napa Valley 100/btl.
* Cab Franc - One of my favorites, especially for value. But again, when it's overripened it loses the CF varietal character with it's seductive spices and becomes "just wine". I tend to like CF from the Loire Valley.
* Decanting - I go back and forth. On the one hand it helps many younger vintages, but then again I like perceiving the changes in the wine as the bottle is consumed. It's also a crapshoot on old wines, could help but could also destroy it.
* Wine friends - this is probably the best part of wine. And yes there are those with 20 years experience and those with one year experience repeated 20 times. And not anyone can know anywhere close to "everything". I've got friends that know a vast number of labels and winemakers but know almost nothing about the winery or vineyards. I also know winemakers that don't know every cult or obscure Napa ultra premium but have vast knowledge of growing grapes and making wine. And sort of knowledge in between. And therein lies the fun of having wine friends, there's always something you know, but there's always something you don't but a friend does.Absolutely! But it changes with time and budget. My buy in used to be $30-ish. It's quite a bit higher now, but I'm on the old side (i.e. I know I'm not gonna die broke) so the money spends more easily. And the thrill of finding a quality but inexpensive wine also tails off. It's the old story of the guy who says "I found a $20 wine as good as your $100 bottle!" and his friend replies "well yeah, but you had to buy 8 different bottles to find it."Quote:
there's a minimal threshold to getting enjoyable wine. The cheap sugared up stuff is almost more like Pepsi. Once you rise above that you can find enjoyable wines in all price points.
cecil77 said:
Wow, lots of good thoughts.
Several comments, in no particular order:
* Serving temperature - too cold and retro-nasal shuts down (like tasting when you have a cold), too warm and alcohol volatizes giving acrid smell. One thing though is to recognize the difference between taste and the sensation of being refreshed (cool/cold drink on a warm day). I think many people drink their wines (both red and white) too cold because it's refreshing. But yeah, "room temperature" should never have been a thing, rather "cellar temperature".* That may be a more popular opinion on this board than you think. And I would extend it to $250 Napa cabs and some even higher than that. "too" is also exactly how I describe them. Over ripeness and overextraction can mask subtle clonal differences (similar to an amp clipping to where the music just becomes noise) - IMO it's why you can throw a blanket over many high dollar Napa cabs - they just taste very similar. A $40-80 Premier Cru from St Emilion can be a tremendous bargain.Quote:
It's an unpopular opinion on this board, but I really don't love the 75-125 Napa cabs I have had. They are good, but I find them too much. Too much alcohol, too bold, too fruit driven. Just not my pallet I think. Of course there are exceptions, to this, but often times I'd rather have a smart buy from BDX in the 40-60 range than the Napa Valley 100/btl.
* Cab Franc - One of my favorites, especially for value. But again, when it's overripened it loses the CF varietal character with it's seductive spices and becomes "just wine". I tend to like CF from the Loire Valley.
* Decanting - I go back and forth. On the one hand it helps many younger vintages, but then again I like perceiving the changes in the wine as the bottle is consumed. It's also a crapshoot on old wines, could help but could also destroy it.
* Wine friends - this is probably the best part of wine. And yes there are those with 20 years experience and those with one year experience repeated 20 times. And not anyone can know anywhere close to "everything". I've got friends that know a vast number of labels and winemakers but know almost nothing about the winery or vineyards. I also know winemakers that don't know every cult or obscure Napa ultra premium but have vast knowledge of growing grapes and making wine. And sort of knowledge in between. And therein lies the fun of having wine friends, there's always something you know, but there's always something you don't but a friend does.Absolutely! But it changes with time and budget. My buy in used to be $30-ish. It's quite a bit higher now, but I'm on the old side (i.e. I know I'm not gonna die broke) so the money spends more easily. And the thrill of finding a quality but inexpensive wine also tails off. It's the old story of the guy who says "I found a $20 wine as good as your $100 bottle!" and his friend replies "well yeah, but you had to buy 8 different bottles to find it."Quote:
there's a minimal threshold to getting enjoyable wine. The cheap sugared up stuff is almost more like Pepsi. Once you rise above that you can find enjoyable wines in all price points.