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Do you have any recs for fortified wines? I have been enjoying Madeiras lately.
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# ? May 20, 2014 02:52 |
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# ? May 4, 2024 13:41 |
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Kasumeat posted:There's no such thing as inexpensive icewine, it's very expensive to produce: tiny yields, manual harvesting, incredible risk of crop loss due to late harvest, and only grown in high-labor-cost areas. However, there are plenty of other great (IMO vastly superior) dessert wines out there. I've already written about them in more detail earlier in the thread, but my favorites are the chenin blanc based wines of the Loire valley and the sweeter styles of German Riesling, especially beerenauslese. In the vein of ice wine for Californians, Bonny Doon winery is in Santa Cruz, CA, and they make what they call "Vin de Glaciere". This is a process of cryoextraction where the grapes are harvested, partially frozen at the winery, and then pressed. It's been to long since I've tried it to remember whether or not it's any good.
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# ? May 20, 2014 05:55 |
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Missouri Fever posted:Do you have any recs for fortified wines? I have been enjoying Madeiras lately. I'm a fan of a good tawny port. Hell, I'll take a mediocre tawny port. The nice one with the silk-screen label, looks old-timey, from Portugal. Great stuff. Their ruby is good too. Standard, widely-available, it's great! Same deal with Warre's port. I've been crushing on Sonoma wines lately but I'm still looking to see if there is a good port out there. Haven't seen anything but I haven't really been looking either. For a real treat, make smoking bishop when it is nice and cold. Mmmmm. Not fortified, but Sauternes are my jam. I love that poo poo.
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# ? May 20, 2014 06:27 |
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In some ways, I sort of like a cheap, rough tawny port more than a vintage port.
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# ? May 20, 2014 11:05 |
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Missouri Fever posted:Do you have any recs for fortified wines? I have been enjoying Madeiras lately. What style(s) do you enjoy? Lighter and drier like sercial? Or richer and sweeter like boal?
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# ? May 20, 2014 18:40 |
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Typical question- we've got a stash of whiskey that great-grandpa bought at Duty Free back around 1996 and never drank. Some of the bottles have cork damage, and some look like they have have been opened just once for tasting. Some are definitely still sealed. How safe are the ones with damaged corks, how can I check, and what do you think about selling them as bottle keeps at my friend's lounge in a "Russian Roulette" kind of way? This is Japanese and whiskey is still very fashionable with old men. I checked Yahoo! Japan auctions to estimate some prices but not everything had a similar listing. My estimated roulette price in USD is listed. 1. Old Parr 750ml Fancy white box ($15) 2. King of Scots 17 years 700ml Fancy red box ($15) 3. CAMUS cognac Grand Master's Collection Michelangelo (book shaped ceramic decanter.) ($15) 4. CAMUS cognac Napoleon Vielle Reserve (book shaped ceramic decanter.) ($10) 5. Royal Salute 21 years ($20) 6. Royal Salute Chivas Brothers 21 years ($20) 7. Remy Martin XO special cognac ($50) 8. Glenfiddich maybe opened once ($10) 9. Dimple cute bottle ($20) 10. Wild Turkey Barrel Proof Bourbon 750ml ($30) 11. Yang Gui Fei shochu 750ml ($10)
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# ? Jun 8, 2014 08:11 |
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peanut posted:Typical question- we've got a stash of whiskey that great-grandpa bought at Duty Free back around 1996 and never drank. Some of the bottles have cork damage, and some look like they have have been opened just once for tasting. Some are definitely still sealed. You're not going to have anything harmful develop, but if they haven't been stored properly there are all sorts of off flavours that can crop up, from sun exposure, cork disintegration, to oxidation. You can check by tasting them, or sell them sealed with a note about the storage conditions. Also prices are very regional so I can't say for sure, although many of those look off, especially "dimple cute bottle," a steal at only $20.
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# ? Jun 9, 2014 06:42 |
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Given the poor storage conditions, damaged corks and several of them being open (!!!), I think the prices you have set are reasonable. I live in the United States and will buy them and pay for shipping. Let me know which ones are open, damaged, etc. (Sucker, even with shipping, I'll be making off like a bandit! The CAMUS Michelangelo alone auctions for around $200)
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# ? Jun 10, 2014 06:04 |
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Have you seen Somm? http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/somm/ Anyway, I love the thread. I have gotten into wines a hell of a lot more in the last few years, I particularly love most things from the Loire Valley. A quick question, what regions do you recommend for Gamay?
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# ? Jun 10, 2014 08:34 |
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Kanye East posted:A quick question, what regions do you recommend for Gamay? I'm not an expert, but the best examples I've had have all been Cru Beaujolais. I guess it depends what style of wine you're looking for, though.
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# ? Jun 10, 2014 15:46 |
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Kanye East posted:Have you seen Somm? http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/somm/ Somm is actually a documentary of literally everybody in this industry. Cru Beaujolais is the only concentration of good gamay anywhere, although there is the odd producer elsewhere making something good. The cru of Morgon is generally the best, especially from the steep volcanic slopes of the lieu-dit Cote du Py.
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# ? Jun 10, 2014 16:36 |
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Awesome, thanks Kasumeat and PT6A.
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# ? Jun 11, 2014 23:12 |
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# ? May 4, 2024 13:41 |
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Shbobdb posted:Given the poor storage conditions, damaged corks and several of them being open (!!!), I think the prices you have set are reasonable. I live in the United States and will buy them and pay for shipping. Let me know which ones are open, damaged, etc. Really????!!!!!! I've sent the sealed Wild Turkey off as an experiment to my friend's hostess lounge, and will probably sell the iffy ones to a local Japan goon. Maybe I'll keep a kawaii bottle as a souvenir for display. Thx goons
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# ? Jun 12, 2014 10:28 |