I sat down this morning and took a bit of a look at my Cellartracker account to do a sort of casual/brief 'audit' of varietals, drinking windows etc, just to get an idea of where I am at.
I am reasonably happy with the amount of whites I have built up in a short period, the bulk of which have drinking windows from sort of now over the next 7-8 years, with a few with a slightly longer window.
I have also started building a bit of a stockpile of reds, with a reasonable spread of drinking windows from sort of 2016-2030, partly through buying just a few older bottles which are drinking well now to 2018-20 via auction. I plan on doing a little more of that to allow my own purchase on release reds to mature. It has been great to try a few wines like the '04 basket press, '02 and '04 dead arm, '06 Bi 0. I need to buy some more of this sort of wine and probably some more in the lower price bracket to make it more sustainable to drink now.
It occurs to me though that I have neglected a few areas which I should start balancing out over the next period of buying. In particular
- My cabernet stocks are a very small proportion of the overall number of bottles and I need to just start gently fleshing this out, especially with wine drinking 2020-2030.
- I need to stop drinking all my pinot as soon as I buy it
![Very Happy :D](./images/smilies/icon_biggrin.gif)
- I need to find some premium whites which will age and be drinkable 2025-2030 (or beyond) and start laying a few down now so that when I am nearing 50 I have some happy drinking
![Very Happy :D](./images/smilies/icon_biggrin.gif)
- I need to lay down some champagne, with only a handful in the cellar comprising '04 Moet, '03 and '04 Dom. The recent Sydney offline in Feb where I brought along an '02 Pol Roger and Andy bought along another '02 which I can't recall was a real eye opener. My wife and I both enjoy champagne and, apparently, aged champagne
![Smile :)](./images/smilies/icon_smile.gif)
- I probably need to lay down some fortified wine/port as I really enjoy this stuff and I know it takes time.
Some of these wines are wines I am just not familiar with from an ageing perspective, such as champagne and port, though recent samples have confirmed I do like them matured. Some are wines I am much more familiar with in terms of shorter term cellaring such as chardonnay and pinot. I am reading up and trying to work some stuff out myself but I would be really interested in any suggestions or hints, even if it is only a few particular recent vintages/regions to look out for. The problem is that it is pretty difficult to work out where the 'value' is and a lot of this stuff obviously isn't that easy to just find and taste.
Budget depends on varietal, obviously I don't expect to be buying a lot of long term cellar worthy champagne for $50 a bottle
Cheers.