J.R. said:
bularry said:
I have less than 300 bottles. It is all in a closet at my house. No special cellar. I think it will be fine as long as I don't keep any 10+ years like that. Ideally I'll find a good off-site place in a few years so I can store with a little more peace of mind. Just don't have budget room to do it right now.
It should be fine in the closet as long as you don't leave on vacation and turn off your AC and it gets to 110 inside. It will be cooked.
J.R., I'm going us this to respond to this short one and the long one you posted above.
First, I'll sort of respectfully disagree with this point. It should be fine for 1+ years, but I would be concerned about 5+ at room temp (70-75). I agree that wine is not as delicate as some make it out to be, but at higher than cellar temps longer term it certainly loses some of it's vibrancy and the alcohol tends to come to the forefront. Just my opinion.
Now, as to your longer post. You and I have very similar wine philosophies. (And, we're likely neighbors. I'm in UP - hence my handle.) I'm heavy into BDX, but have almost zero 1st growths because I don't see value there. My wine groups usually taste blind within a category, so it eliminates label bias. Great wines consistently show themselves and the 1st growths never stand out. (Side tip to anyone interested: The 2003 Smith Haut Lafitte consistently ends up in the top couple of wines in our blind tastings and can still be had for a reasonable price.)
Also agree with your attitude about Cali being too big and over the top. Now, I enjoy some of those, but don't find them to be my first choices. I do love me some Maybach, Schrader, Realm, and Rivers Marie though. They are just hedonistic pleasures. I find SQN to be consistently over blown and have never rated them highly in blind tastes. Just over the top. I like Saxum ok, but mainly buy it for guests as a "wow" wine. And, I may be stepping on some toes here, but Caymus is just terrible. (Disclosure - I've served the SS, but I knew my audience and they loved it.)
Burgundy is a minefield, and I've come to avoid it because of that risk. But, I'll admit that an excellent 30+ year old red Burg is out of this world. I just can't tell which ones are going to hit and all the bigger names are uber expensive for even the basic wines (i.e. $250+/btl.). It's just not worth the risk of my capital. I have just a few cases of mixed quality stuff remaining.
I've come to love a lot of Italian wines, but my interest came about the time that my wine buying fell off the cliff, so I haven't kept up the buying. Great Barolo or Barbaresco is sublime.
I like domestic pinot, but for me, a lot of it is like candy. I enjoy it, but it's not in my wheelhouse usually. You mentioned Oregon, I do love Thomas. But, I fell off the list a few years ago and don't have any recent vintages.