And I think you guys have pretty much talked me out of the 2020 001. I shared your concerns about the vintage but was still on the fence. My wallet appreciates the direction you pushed me.
Second this recommendation. Only have been once and can't wait to go back.phxAg said:
I'm a big fan of Valette for dinner in Healdsburg
I need to give it another try sometime. Had extremely rude service there the 1 time I have been and there are too many great restaurants around for me to "need" to go back.jh0400 said:
Forgot to add Barndiva as a dinner rec.
East Dallas Ag said:
Staying over an extra night on the back end of a San Fran trip and looking for Healdsburg recs - ideally vineyards along the 101 corridor or just south of Healdsburg, not looking to drive too far off the beaten path since my time is limited - prefer visiting the actual vineyard vs. just a tasting room in town.
Bonus rec 1 of the vineyards near Sonoma County airport I might be able to hit before my flight the next day.
Also looking for a dinner rec in downtown Healdsburg that isn't Single Thread, as much as I'd love to do that.
TIA!
BSD said:
My niece (sophomore) is down from College Station this weekend and wanted to try some wine. She's tried some red wines before but was never a fan. So last night we opened a 2018 Chteau Climens Asphodle sauv blanc and she really enjoyed it. Tonight she wants to try a chard…or beer. Reminds me of me when I was that age.
BSD said:
How long did you decant? I've got some '12-'14s that I plan to open in the next year or so.
Stay strong!BSD said:
I'm staying strong. I really liked the 2019 but still saying nope on 2020.
yeah, so many back vintages available out there from Napa or Bordeaux, why by 2020's that could be questionable.WestUAg said:
Don't think the 001 is worth the price. Especially 2020. None of should be buying 2020
I've been wondering the same thing. I thought some humidity was required to keep the corks from drying out, but refrigerators tend to remove moisture from the air.Chipotlemonger said:
How do y'all raise humidity in your storage?
I've had my wines in a temp-controlled fridge that I moved them into once I outgrew my 16bottle fridge (the 16 bottle fridge died too). It is too dry in there, unfortunately. I should have raised the humidity on the fridge a few months back now, but that's water under the bridge. I checked it once and assumed it would be relatively steady but checked it again yesterday and it was way low. Humidity notwithstanding they've been at 57 or so for the whole time.
Chipotlemonger said:
I set a few open cups of water in there at different spots but maybe I really need a sponge.
Something about the water being in a sponge and that sponge surface probably helps it evaporate better/faster than just an open container of water.
About to look for a sponge on hand.
FTAco07 said:
I used a sponge in my old under the counter 30 bottle fridge and had to re-wet it every day. That said, unless you are storing for years I wouldn't worry too much about it.
My current setup gets dry (45-50%) when the a/c compressor is on but has a feature to run the fan without the compressor for a couple minutes before turning off and that pushes the moisture back in to get back to 60-65%.
I had a spare temp/humidity sensor that I had been meaning to put in my rigged up wine fridge. Finally did so and that's when I realized my humidity was lower than I thought. They're not too pricey.FTAco07 said:
The wine room cooling unit fan is just returning the moisture that the unit's cooler takes out of the air by blowing it back in the room. I honestly have no idea what the RH is in the house.