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The Official Wine Thread

tifosi

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Manton

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You need to hold that for a long time.
 

tifosi

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Well I drank that one in particular, but I have 2 more 2012 :) . I also have two 2009 and one 2010.

The 2012 was really nice as young as it is. I just started getting really into wine not too long ago, so I'm used to drinking young wine. 2010 Bordeaux is the oldest so far. Haha

I'm into experiencing a lot of wines right now so I can learn what to hold onto and also so I can learn the differences of young vs old eventually.
 

venividivicibj

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Something like that needs at least 10 years (probably more if you want true tertiary characteristics). But obviously you want to see what types of wines you like before buying a bunch- don't want to stock up for ten years only to realize you don't like bordeaux!
 

tifosi

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Something like that needs at least 10 years (probably more if you want true tertiary characteristics). But obviously you want to see what types of wines you like before buying a bunch- don't want to stock up for ten years only to realize you don't like bordeaux!

For sure. Gotta drink something over the next 20 years while it's aging though...haha
 

Principle

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Some tasty bottles from a long Fourth of July weekend. Not included in the photo so were several bubbley bottles recommended in that New York Times article posted a few pages ago.

Really looking to taste more and more Nebbiolo. Would love suggestions!
 

venividivicibj

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Vietti Perbacco is a good baby Barolo at $22 or so (comprised of the grapes they didn't use/were too young for their single vineyard bottlings)
 

djblisk

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I drank some terrific stuff from Tenuta Solar in Verona Italy. Cost was about 15 euro a bottle. Sigh.... I tasted so much fab wine in Italy for pennies... Of course they don't ship or distribute since their stock is local.
 

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