![Wink :wink:](./images/smilies/icon_wink.gif)
But chewy jam-bombs seem to stay chew jam-bombs at 15 years old, but the fruit just takes on more of a 'dried' character.
I'm thinking of a few older Torbrecks & St Halletts that I've tried, in particular. I
Of course you changed your position. Here are the first two lines of your first post:Polymer wrote:WTF...I haven't changed anything I've said...This was always about the RIGHT cellaring strategy...Mahmoud Ali wrote: Tell me about it! From "don't buy to cellar", to "strategic cellaring", and then "the right cellaring strategy". Finally a result. It was a tough slog I tell you but my job is done.
Maybe what you wrote isn't what you meant to say but, in essence, you were putting forth a position that one shouldn't buy wines to cellar and that what "cellaring" would occur was only by accident of having wines leftover from regular drinking purchases. You continued to defend your initial post and only later did you add "strategic cellaring" to your position, and even later "the right cellaring strategy". The latter is a far cry from "don't buy to cellar". In which universe is this not a change? WTF indeed.Polymer wrote:I'll probably give the least popular opinion.. Don't buy to cellar...You'll end up cellaring because your buying will outpace your drinking but I definitely would not be buying in multiples with the intent of cellaring.
Once again I reiterate, I am neither offended or annoyed by your ideas. However, now that you bring it up I am indeed annoyed by your utter inability to be consistent and coherant although, come to think of it, by now I shouldn't be surprised.Polymer wrote:The people who are taking it as "This is the only way to go and anyone not doing this is wrong", like yourself, for example, are the ones that probably need to read it a bit more carefully because you've somehow felt offended or annoyed at a contrary idea yet your own responses show you haven't understood what I was saying - you said you have but it is blatantly obvious you don't.
You're right, there is absolutely no doubt that your position involves more caveats as you go along. The only person misrepresenting your position is yourself, to the point where you keep adding caveats and changing your position. That's probably the reason why you now say:Polymer wrote:I can only fill what I'm saying with so many caveats..where it has been littered with "If you are buying X, if you have passive storage, if your average bottle price is X etc, etc in my opinion" and even flat out talking about cellaring certain wines...
You've consistently misrepresented my position which I'm not sure is intentional or lack of something else. But either way, I haven't changed my position even one iota.
I've read Mivvy's and Jamie's posts but did not realize that they are better able to express your ideas than you can in a dozen posts.Polymer wrote:I would strongly suggest YOU read both Mivvy's and Jamie's post..because both are mentioning exactly what I've been trying to say and using real life examples (Bordeaux and AU wine (generically)). They're also bringing up examples where they're going to continue to buy and cellar (Burgundy and Piedmont) because they're concerned about prices increasing, and rightfully so.
So first is a statement which was clarified in the exact same post...Polymer wrote: Don't buy to cellar...You'll end up cellaring because your buying will outpace your drinking but I definitely would not be buying in multiples with the intent of cellaring.
So I've specifically said there are a few select things you do want to cellar...All from my first post. So that's not consistent with your statement that I said not to cellar...because here I've specifically said that's not the case. And the reference to "leftovers" that have cellar unintentionally is the way you fill in those cheaper, lesser bottles that will get some age and may end up being something great at the end (or possibly not). But the entire way I've advocating cellaring select wines...what that will mean specifically will vary per person. Again, it isn't meant to set a specific strategy but meant to provoke thought.Polymer wrote: There might be a few select things you do want to cellar and that's fine...and yes, you might miss out on a few opportunities..but the actual cost of doing that far outweighs not...Buy back vintages if you must...drink whatever else you've unintentionally cellared...
This means buying 1-2 of things...at most...with maybe a few exceptions...
I've been incredibly consistent...in every post.. My first post categorically proves you've been misrepresenting what I've said and your statement I've changed my stance is wrong. I've only repeated the same thing several times...I do find it odd that you spent the effort to quote my first post but didn't bother actually reading the entire thing..and if you did, I'd suggest reading it again because obviously you didn't understand it.Mahmoud Ali wrote: Once again I reiterate, I am neither offended or annoyed by your ideas. However, now that you bring it up I am indeed annoyed by your utter inability to be consistent and coherant although, come to think of it, by now I shouldn't be surprised.
Yet oddly enough they got what I was trying to say...Why was that?Mahmoud Ali wrote: I've read Mivvy's and Jamie's posts but did not realize that they are better able to express your ideas than you can in a dozen posts.
http://forum.auswine.com.au/viewtopic.php?f ... 60#p152957Mahmoud Ali wrote: I am beginning to see that you might have a somewhat narrow understanding of the world of wine and the myriad variety of wines and styles. There are many wines that fly under the radar of collectors and will almost never appear on the secondary market, especially in older vintages. These wines tend to be bought and drunk with little consideration for aging. Example: the 1998 Rockford ‘Moppa Springs’ which I bought at cellar door. Not easy to find I suspect. (I note that you ignored my example of the 15 year-old Greek wine in an earlier post
Right...I'm not saying you can't have some of wine Group 1 in Group 2...but that also means the person in Group 2 has spent even more money even though we know there likely some sort of budget (what someone can afford). Looking at it another way, you could increase the holding of number 1 with better wine or more variety assuming the budget is the same....but again, it is just an example...But as you pointed out, many people have BOTH...What I'm trying to say is maybe the second part, where they have less expensive bottles in larger quantities, need to be examined...As you've already seen my example, you've somehow agreed I am not saying to not cellar any wine.Mahmoud Ali wrote: Your two scenarios is really just what exists in most peoples cellars. They will have some expensive bottles of wines which are often bought in ones and twos, as well as less expensive bottles in larger quantities.
THE post of the thread !!!JamieBahrain wrote:I think the OP's been driven back to drinking beer.
Sage advice. We pretty much avoid eating out for the very same reason - overpriced wine, and all far too young. After all our cellaring my better half and I can drink modest 15-20 year old wine from all over the world, whether Rioja, Chianti, or Cotes du Rhone, and because we stuck to reputable produces and good vintages we hardly have a mis-step.grhm1961 wrote:My wife and I been buying and cellaring wine since the early-1980s on a modest budget. For a long time we had a house with a cellar in Adelaide, which was brilliant, but now live in Sydney without a cellar. Whilst we do have a wine fridge for the better wines, the vast bulk are stashed around the house in various, relatively cool spots, however it is far from ideal. Over time you learn which wines will store well in less-than-ideal conditions, and we focus on these, tasting regularly from various vintages which ensures nothing dies before we get to drink them, or very few, at least. We aim to cellar for that sweet spot of 8 - 12 years. Anything longer than that is at risk in our sub-optimal storage, although, as I said, the good stuff gets put in the wine fridge.
If I may be presumptuous enough to offer any advice at all, it would be simply this: whatever you buy, and whatever way you decide to store it, you simply must keep a detailed database of your wine (I use a simple spreadsheet) and keep tasting notes (even brief ones) for the wines you are cellaring. Otherwise you will kiss goodbye to many hard-earned dollars on wine you lose track of and have die in the cellar, or conversely, wines you drink too soon.
We love aged wine, and we love cooking. We can't afford to eat out at Sydney prices very often, and most definitely can't afford the aged wines on offer at most restaurants, but we can enjoy good food, and great wine at home. It's most definitely worth it.
And yes, we do also buy some aged wines at auction. You definitely can pick up some bargains that way, and if you buy through reputable auction houses you'll rarely regret your decisions.
most apt davedave vino wrote:[img]http://www.grapemates.org/files/Misc/wrong.jpg[/img]
I dont wish to engage on the above discussion but I do have similar problems eating out and buying wines off wine lists that are over priced, far too young and not ready to drink. It seems that BYO restaurants are shrinking on a daily basis in Sydney and yet so many restaurants would rather sit empty early in the week rather than be flexible.Mahmoud Ali wrote:
Sage advice. We pretty much avoid eating out for the very same reason - overpriced wine, and all far too young. After all our cellaring my better half and I can drink modest 15-20 year old wine from all over the world, whether Rioja, Chianti, or Cotes du Rhone, and because we stuck to reputable produces and good vintages we hardly have a mis-step.
Sydney is a bugger, the heat can kill wine. The few wines I had left at the in-laws place between visits were clearly tired and exhibited signs of heat affectation to varying degrees despite being in the coolest room in house. They were in no way like the Australian wines I have cellared in Canada.My sympathies on your having to make compromises.
Cheers ............. Mahmoud.
Brisbane byo is ruggedrooman wrote:I dont wish to engage on the above discussion but I do have similar problems eating out and buying wines off wine lists that are over priced, far too young and not ready to drink. It seems that BYO restaurants are shrinking on a daily basis in Sydney and yet so many restaurants would rather sit empty early in the week rather than be flexible.Mahmoud Ali wrote:
Sage advice. We pretty much avoid eating out for the very same reason - overpriced wine, and all far too young. After all our cellaring my better half and I can drink modest 15-20 year old wine from all over the world, whether Rioja, Chianti, or Cotes du Rhone, and because we stuck to reputable produces and good vintages we hardly have a mis-step.
Sydney is a bugger, the heat can kill wine. The few wines I had left at the in-laws place between visits were clearly tired and exhibited signs of heat affectation to varying degrees despite being in the coolest room in house. They were in no way like the Australian wines I have cellared in Canada.My sympathies on your having to make compromises.
Cheers ............. Mahmoud.
By way of contrast Brown Sugar which just down the road from me and BYO is packed every night as diners mix wines from their own cellars with wines off the list. I have been trying to convince a local restaurant that is empty early in the week to adopt a similar or modified policy re BYO without success.
I can understand successful restaurants sticking with a no BYO policy but when the place is half empty night after night it is time to rethink the business model. I have said to local restaurants that I am looking to bring aged wines they can't source or offer and hence don't mind higher BYO charges to cover their loss on comparable list wines and yet the owners would prefer to remain half empty.michel wrote:Brisbane byo is ruggedrooman wrote:
I dont wish to engage on the above discussion but I do have similar problems eating out and buying wines off wine lists that are over priced, far too young and not ready to drink. It seems that BYO restaurants are shrinking on a daily basis in Sydney and yet so many restaurants would rather sit empty early in the week rather than be flexible.
By way of contrast Brown Sugar which just down the road from me and BYO is packed every night as diners mix wines from their own cellars with wines off the list. I have been trying to convince a local restaurant that is empty early in the week to adopt a similar or modified policy re BYO without success.
I concur restaurants have brutally expensive wines with no maturity
I am happy to pay for byo
One of my best dining experiences was talking a 'strictly no BYO' restaurant into accepting our wines: we agreed ahead of time to buy champagne off their wine list and pay a fair corkage for the rest. We then sent a glass of each wine (which included a Ch Mouton Rothschild) back to the kitchen for everyone to sample and we all had an amazing time. The owner and the head chef both chatted with us at the end of the night and all agreed it had been a memorable and eye-opening experience.rooman wrote:
I can understand successful restaurants sticking with a no BYO policy but when the place is half empty night after night it is time to rethink the business model. I have said to local restaurants that I am looking to bring aged wines they can't source or offer and hence don't mind higher BYO charges to cover their loss on comparable list wines and yet the owners would prefer to remain half empty.
When the recession hits BYO makes a come backgrhm1961 wrote:One of my best dining experiences was talking a 'strictly no BYO' restaurant into accepting our wines: we agreed ahead of time to buy champagne off their wine list and pay a fair corkage for the rest. We then sent a glass of each wine (which included a Ch Mouton Rothschild) back to the kitchen for everyone to sample and we all had an amazing time. The owner and the head chef both chatted with us at the end of the night and all agreed it had been a memorable and eye-opening experience.rooman wrote:
I can understand successful restaurants sticking with a no BYO policy but when the place is half empty night after night it is time to rethink the business model. I have said to local restaurants that I am looking to bring aged wines they can't source or offer and hence don't mind higher BYO charges to cover their loss on comparable list wines and yet the owners would prefer to remain half empty.
Everything is negotiable!
and you made a proper effort to show them that good hospitality can work in both directions! Such attitudes go a long way to changing mindsets.grhm1961 wrote:One of my best dining experiences was talking a 'strictly no BYO' restaurant into accepting our wines: we agreed ahead of time to buy champagne off their wine list and pay a fair corkage for the rest. We then sent a glass of each wine (which included a Ch Mouton Rothschild) back to the kitchen for everyone to sample and we all had an amazing time. The owner and the head chef both chatted with us at the end of the night and all agreed it had been a memorable and eye-opening experience.rooman wrote:
I can understand successful restaurants sticking with a no BYO policy but when the place is half empty night after night it is time to rethink the business model. I have said to local restaurants that I am looking to bring aged wines they can't source or offer and hence don't mind higher BYO charges to cover their loss on comparable list wines and yet the owners would prefer to remain half empty.
Everything is negotiable!
I think sometimes they are concerned this will just lead people who would have come on Friday or Saturday to come mid-week to take advantage of the BYO thus negatively impacting their margins overall...Ian S wrote:and you made a proper effort to show them that good hospitality can work in both directions! Such attitudes go a long way to changing mindsets.grhm1961 wrote:One of my best dining experiences was talking a 'strictly no BYO' restaurant into accepting our wines: we agreed ahead of time to buy champagne off their wine list and pay a fair corkage for the rest. We then sent a glass of each wine (which included a Ch Mouton Rothschild) back to the kitchen for everyone to sample and we all had an amazing time. The owner and the head chef both chatted with us at the end of the night and all agreed it had been a memorable and eye-opening experience.rooman wrote:
I can understand successful restaurants sticking with a no BYO policy but when the place is half empty night after night it is time to rethink the business model. I have said to local restaurants that I am looking to bring aged wines they can't source or offer and hence don't mind higher BYO charges to cover their loss on comparable list wines and yet the owners would prefer to remain half empty.
Everything is negotiable!
For those places struggling on a Mon/Tue/Wed, then it really does make sense to start having a BYO evening, as 60 customers will be much better than 10, even if the corkage is modest or even free.
Having worked in the industry, the people who can afford to go out mid to early week are often quite different from those who go out on Friday and Saturday night. I walk around Bondi during the week and know which are BYO and those that aren't. Early in the week, restaurants like Brown Sugar, Pompeii which are BYO are packed every night often with two or more sittings. Those that aren't normally struggle to seat half the restaurant and yet they persist. It makes no sense to me.sjw_11 wrote:I think sometimes they are concerned this will just lead people who would have come on Friday or Saturday to come mid-week to take advantage of the BYO thus negatively impacting their margins overall...Ian S wrote:
and you made a proper effort to show them that good hospitality can work in both directions! Such attitudes go a long way to changing mindsets.
For those places struggling on a Mon/Tue/Wed, then it really does make sense to start having a BYO evening, as 60 customers will be much better than 10, even if the corkage is modest or even free.
I somehow doubt that would outweigh the net increase in their business, but I guess it depends on the type of restaurant and the location (e.g. a friendly bistro in a dense urban area I would think could massively drive the avg # of visits the local residents made with a BYO policy).
Or Mark, over enthusiastic wine somms who have mis-judged their clientele and are now holding a shit load of stock that they have to shift. A couple of places in Adelaide did deals where they gave reductions or specials on certain wines on their lists. When mark ups are routinely 300-600% something's gotta give, and I would say the punters round Bondi have the restaurants sussedrooman wrote:Having worked in the industry, the people who can afford to go out mid to early week are often quite different from those who go out on Friday and Saturday night. I walk around Bondi during the week and know which are BYO and those that aren't. Early in the week, restaurants like Brown Sugar, Pompeii which are BYO are packed every night often with two or more sittings. Those that aren't normally struggle to seat half the restaurant and yet they persist. It makes no sense to me.sjw_11 wrote:I think sometimes they are concerned this will just lead people who would have come on Friday or Saturday to come mid-week to take advantage of the BYO thus negatively impacting their margins overall...Ian S wrote:
and you made a proper effort to show them that good hospitality can work in both directions! Such attitudes go a long way to changing mindsets.
For those places struggling on a Mon/Tue/Wed, then it really does make sense to start having a BYO evening, as 60 customers will be much better than 10, even if the corkage is modest or even free.
I somehow doubt that would outweigh the net increase in their business, but I guess it depends on the type of restaurant and the location (e.g. a friendly bistro in a dense urban area I would think could massively drive the avg # of visits the local residents made with a BYO policy).
Craigphillisc wrote:Or Mark, over enthusiastic wine somms who have mis-judged their clientele and are now holding a shit load of stock that they have to shift. A couple of places in Adelaide did deals where they gave reductions or specials on certain wines on their lists. When mark ups are routinely 300-600% something's gotta give, and I would say the punters round Bondi have the restaurants sussedrooman wrote:
Having worked in the industry, the people who can afford to go out mid to early week are often quite different from those who go out on Friday and Saturday night. I walk around Bondi during the week and know which are BYO and those that aren't. Early in the week, restaurants like Brown Sugar, Pompeii which are BYO are packed every night often with two or more sittings. Those that aren't normally struggle to seat half the restaurant and yet they persist. It makes no sense to me.
Bit like estate agents buying listings and when the property doesn't sell, someone looses, but it aint going to be the buyer.
Cheers craig
Davidtuxy85 wrote:I have been collecting/cellaring wine for about 2 years now. As a rookie wine collector I am interested in whether you have any tips on how to build a good collection that I will be able to enjoy in 5, 10, 20 and 30 years time? I am 33 years of age, so I hopefully have many years to collect and drink what I collect.
....
David
Rooman,rooman wrote:It is one of the intangible benefits of cellaring wine - sharing something you have collected long ago with a close friend, perhaps if you are lucky also sharing the back story to a particular bottle - where you purchased it and why. In my experience collectors are incredibility generous people often sharing extremely expensive wines with friends, never asking for some form of quid pro quo.