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Hell, its hard enough to do even one bottle of great wine justice: while every so often, while you’re drinking a bottle, it all comes together spectacularly, there will also always be times when you take a sip absentmindedly between bites and miss a lot of the beauty and flavor.
What is blind tasting good for? Well, for one thing it’s very good at showing how important knowledge of price, as opposed to price itself, is as a contributing factor to a wine’s perceived quality. If you know that a wine you’re drinking is expensive, you’ll probably like it much more. If you’re deceived into thinking that a wine is expensive (if someone poured Yellowtail into a Lafite bottle, say) you’ll like that much more, too. And if someone poured Lafite into a colorful screw-top bottle, you’d like it less.
The one thing i dont understand about wine buffs is how they pretend there are certain flavours in the wine.
It is fine to have heaps of knowledge about wine, just don't act like it makes you any better than the next person..
I must say I am a wine buff. I have an extensive collection of some of the finest wines Australia has to offer. I agree that some of the descriptions offered about wine are far too verbose and wanky! Also, I have bought many expensive bottles of wine that were hopeless. Recently I found a wine at $7 per bottle by the dozen that tasted as good as some $30 bottles I've had. Price shouldn't really factor in, the taste should be the decider. However, usually the finest wines are also the most expensive. Not always though. I have tried Grange before and I believe there are other examples of shiraz that rival it in terms of complexity, structure etc (Bremerton old adam shiraz, collector shiraz etc)
Yes Bowman
All wine buffs are wankers...all of them...without exception...every single one of them...snobs and wankers. (Okay maybeone or two of them are OK, but the rest I wouldn't p!ss on if they were on fire)
That's why I only drink beer and spirits.
Cheers
Sir O
(I do have a good knowledge of winebut to me its a simple case of it either tastes good or it doesn't)
Unfortunately beer is still not as 'high class' as wine, although perceptions are slowly changing.
Yes
or is it me thats the wanker?
i got given a box of grange once as a gift from a trading friend from commsec chat many years ago ,
it was a red wine
i am not a wine drinker ........
me and 3 mates sat around the table one night after drinking a few bourbons and decided to get into it , we knocked off 10 bottles of these apparently expensive bottles of grapes , the other 2 i shared on tin can bay jetty one night whilst fishing with a stranger
i must admit the more we drunk the tastier it got
cant say it tasted any different to any other wine ive drunk
i am not a wine drinker so please forgive my lack of understanding on what is a nice wine ....... all tastes the same to me
A job i would love is designing beer lists for fine dining restaurants to suit eachdifferent meal they serve. That way people would have the choice of a wine or beer pairing with their meal.
Unfortunately beer is still not as 'high class' as wine, although perceptions are slowly changing.
James Squire does events such as degustations occasionally where the food is made to match the beer.
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