My list of resolutions are:
- Quality over quantity. Cut down on number of purchases, but raise the bar.
- Balance the Chi in my cellar. Bottle count of Pinot Noir exceeds Shiraz.
- Drink as much wine as apparently all my friends and family think I do!
Scotty vino wrote:More Adelaide offlines. Had my first which i enjoyed but it's been tumbleweeds since then.
Chuck wrote:Learn more about and drink more single malt whisky. After wasting many decades not knowing about them there's a lot of time to make up. And smoke more Cuban cigars. They match SMW perfectly.
Carl
Mike Hawkins wrote:Chuck wrote:Learn more about and drink more single malt whisky. After wasting many decades not knowing about them there's a lot of time to make up. And smoke more Cuban cigars. They match SMW perfectly.
Carl
If you end up liking the aged whiskies, stock up. I visit various distilleries in Scotland every year and virtually all of them have said that 'age statements' on the bottle will be a thing of the past sooner rather than later. They are struggling to keep up with demand and so they create new labels with no age statement and the uninformed consumer is none the wiser....
Scotty vino wrote:More Adelaide offlines. Had my first which i enjoyed but it's been tumbleweeds since then.
Maybe we can hold the next Ade offline in Craig's cellar.
As far as wine goes...
I'm still miles off old world wine. 2016 was a lot of reading and studying french wine regions.
Trying to get a handle on it. Same with Barbaresco and Barolo. Reading a lot online including the auswine
thread on the subject. So MUCH to learn. Miles off, but I'll keep chipping away.
Pay less attention to BIG wine scores. More and more I'm trusting my palate and paying less attention to
to scores that suck me in.
More grape picking! After my day at Marius I'll be back in a flash. What a hoot!
Ian S wrote:Cheers Ozzie - many thanks for starting this thread again.
I found last year's detailed look pretty successful in focusing buying on what I wanted, not what was a great price, a grand name or just more of what I already had enough of. An intentionally limited storage capacity is essential for me in containing what I buy, but also helps focus the mind!
So here's this years 'shopping list'. I won’t get everything and I will buy other stuff, but will avoid buying a mixed case unless the majority of the case is on the list. I might update the list if my interest shifts - no point in being stubborn . Some stuff is also more hopeful than realistic – not typically available here or price-inflated if it is, or in the case of the Primo, only available in half case sizes - not ideal for the Primo Sparkling Shiraz where I seem to be the only fan amongst friends / family.
Aussies & NZ (In relative priority – the lower ones being case fillers more than a justification. More included here than I intend to buy, to allow a specific focus for the Auswine forum)
• Delatite Riesling
• Primo – Moda, Joseph SRS, or anything else from them
• Alkoomi Wandoo if still made
• Houghton Jack Mann
• Explore Aussie Nebbiolo (just had the Stephen Pannell to date)
• Te Mata Elston for populist Chardonnay fix, but also Church Road reserve if ever available for the full butterball experience.
• Tahbilk Marsanne / 1927 vines Marsanne
• Explore ‘new’ trends but with a hard focus on the more elegant / radical end of the spectrum
• Wynns Black Label CS
• Wendouree Shiraz / Mataro
• Woodlands Margaret
• Best’s reds
Italy (in no particular order)
• Try more Cascina degli Ulivi, esp. their Gavi
• La Biancara. I loved the Masieri red I tried from them, so try some others
• More Timorasso
• More Fumin
• Vino Santo from Trentino
• Taurasi, but avoiding high oak/alcohol
• Foradori (Teroldego, or any of their others)
• More Antoniolo Gattinara and Ghemme/Gattinara from Torraccia del Piantavigne (but open to other producers)
• Try another Lacrima Morro d’Alba
• Drei Dona and San Patrignano from Emilia Romagna
• Hauner Hiera (plus other wines from them)
• Explore off the beaten track regions / grapes
• Tiefenbrunner Feldmarschall (to explore ageing it)
• Occhipinti reds + explore other producers not pushing oak / alcohol
• A bottle or two of Brachetto
• Cantine Del Notaio reds, rose or sweet wine
• Vino Nobile di Montepulciano
• Isole e Olena Syrah
ROW and generic (in no particular order)
• Keep the Ch Lamartine Cahors topped up, including the odd magnum
• A little more Pinon sparkling Vouvray
• A little more Madiran / Bandol or similar from Southern France
• Traditional / Rustic Gigondas
• Keep drinking sweet wines, and backfill esp. in halves
• Occasional German Riesling, ideally with a little age and continue tentative interest in German Pinot Noir
• More halves, including fizz
• Keep exploring Spain & Portugal – perhaps including some Buçaco red
• LdH 2005 Rioja reserva reds
• Musar Rosé
• Any interesting mature wines, but not too many over-mature
• Grab 2-3 other left-field natural wines to explore the genre a little more
• The odd purchase off the beaten track e.g. Greece, Romania, Slovakia
JamieBahrain wrote:- I had to cancel a trip to Piedmont in 2016 so will ensure i get there in 2017.
Gavin Trott wrote:JamieBahrain wrote:- I had to cancel a trip to Piedmont in 2016 so will ensure i get there in 2017.
Not exactly a resolution, but am now planning our trip to Italy, wine and food regions, of course, for later in 2017.
Piedmont is a certainty, Tuscany, parts of Sicily and more still to be decided, planned and organised, but already as excited as can be.
Will be seeking some advice and assistance from those of you who visit regularly, what to see, do, what not to miss, where to eat, where to stay etc etc etc
.
Ozzie W wrote:There's been some interest to start a new thread on this topic for 2017, so here it is.
My list of resolutions are:What's your wine resolutions for 2017?
- Quality over quantity. Cut down on number of purchases, but raise the bar.
- Balance the Chi in my cellar. Bottle count of Pinot Noir exceeds Shiraz.
- Drink as much wine as apparently all my friends and family think I do!
pc79 wrote:Not to buy anything more from Lucy Margeaux... blurgh
Ian S wrote:Cheers Ozzie - many thanks for starting this thread again.
I found last year's detailed look pretty successful in focusing buying on what I wanted, not what was a great price, a grand name or just more of what I already had enough of. An intentionally limited storage capacity is essential for me in containing what I buy, but also helps focus the mind!
So here's this years 'shopping list'. I won’t get everything and I will buy other stuff, but will avoid buying a mixed case unless the majority of the case is on the list. I might update the list if my interest shifts - no point in being stubborn . Some stuff is also more hopeful than realistic – not typically available here or price-inflated if it is, or in the case of the Primo, only available in half case sizes - not ideal for the Primo Sparkling Shiraz where I seem to be the only fan amongst friends / family.
Aussies & NZ (In relative priority – the lower ones being case fillers more than a justification. More included here than I intend to buy, to allow a specific focus for the Auswine forum)
• Delatite Riesling
• Primo – Moda, Joseph SRS, or anything else from them
• Alkoomi Wandoo if still made
• Houghton Jack Mann
• Explore Aussie Nebbiolo (just had the Stephen Pannell to date)
• Te Mata Elston for populist Chardonnay fix, but also Church Road reserve if ever available for the full butterball experience.
• Tahbilk Marsanne / 1927 vines Marsanne
• Explore ‘new’ trends but with a hard focus on the more elegant / radical end of the spectrum
• Wynns Black Label CS
• Wendouree Shiraz / Mataro
• Woodlands Margaret
• Best’s reds
Zip, nothing, Zilch, nada, etc. The Elston is the one I do need to remedy and the Jack Mann almost happened but I got distracted by other wines. Some of the others are listed more in hope than expectation that I'll see them
Italy (in no particular order)
• Try more Cascina degli Ulivi, esp. their Gavi
• La Biancara. I loved the Masieri red I tried from them, so try some others
• More Timorasso
• More Fumin
• Vino Santo from Trentino
• Taurasi, but avoiding high oak/alcohol
• Foradori (Teroldego, or any of their others) :) (6 of the Forador- Teroldego)
• More Antoniolo Gattinara and Ghemme/Gattinara from Torraccia del Piantavigne (but open to other producers)
• Try another Lacrima Morro d’Alba
• Drei Dona and San Patrignano from Emilia Romagna
• Hauner Hiera (plus other wines from them)
• Explore off the beaten track regions / grapes
• Tiefenbrunner Feldmarschall (to explore ageing it)
• Occhipinti reds + explore other producers not pushing oak / alcohol
• A bottle or two of Brachetto
• Cantine Del Notaio reds, rose or sweet wine
• Vino Nobile di Montepulciano
• Isole e Olena Syrah
ROW and generic (in no particular order)
• Keep the Ch Lamartine Cahors topped up, including the odd magnum
• A little more Pinon sparkling Vouvray
• A little more Madiran / Bandol or similar from Southern France
• Traditional / Rustic Gigondas
• Keep drinking sweet wines, and backfill esp. in halves
• Occasional German Riesling, ideally with a little age and continue tentative interest in German Pinot Noir I'll cheat here and include a South Tyrol Pinot Noir
• More halves, including fizz
• Keep exploring Spain & Portugal – perhaps including some Buçaco red :) but no Buçaco (or Colares) yet
• LdH 2005 Rioja reserva reds
• Musar Rosé
• Any interesting mature wines, but not too many over-mature :) (got some older Portuguese wines recently, organised by a friend who went over to his house over there & has found a good little wine shop with older wines)
• Grab 2-3 other left-field natural wines to explore the genre a little more My 1st Pet Nat bought!
• The odd purchase off the beaten track e.g. Greece, Romania, Slovakia A fancy Chilean Carignan
winetastic wrote:Keep my purchasing focus on Piedmont and Etna. (30 bottles from Piedmont ranging from quaffers to upper end aged Barolo, 6 single cru Passopisciaro)
Buy more Pinot. (3 bottles of Punt Rd)
Cellar some Champagne. (4 bottles of Jérôme Prévost, making up for lack of quantity with quality there imo)
And like every year, drink better wine.