The Day After

The place on the web to chat about wine, Australian wines, or any other wines for that matter
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Wayno
Posts: 1633
Joined: Sat Apr 29, 2006 6:31 pm
Location: Adelaide, Australia

The Day After

Post by Wayno »

Just recently, I've had some interesting experiences with wine that the next day, I've considered an improvement on the night before. Typically, the wine has evolved from angular/awkward/one dimensional/hard work to (what I considered) more rounded/approachable/level headed. This has not just applied to big reds, two examples being a Bin 389 98 and a Cullen SSB 07. And just today, the Penfolds Cellar Reserve Grenache 02 that I felt was a bit unbalanced, hot and spiritous last night has softened to a more appreciable state. Yet just last night, the Seppelt Chalamber 03 that was quite lively and enjoyable the night before was just plain average the night after.
I'm curious what others' views are on wine 'the next night' - the examples above have not involved decanting into 375ml bottles and/or refrigerating - simply leaving them snoozily 'audozing' overnight.
Cheers
Wayno

Give me the luxuries of life and I will willingly do without the necessities.

monghead
Posts: 1769
Joined: Sat Feb 07, 2004 10:28 pm
Location: Sydney

Post by monghead »

Yeah, we commonly consume our wines over 2 nights too, and don't fuss too much about pouring left overs into a 375mL bottle. Just the cork back in, and on the kitchen table for the next night.

Similarly, the wine tends to be vastly different the next night. Sometimes for the better, sometimes for the worse. I usually use this as an indication of the further cellaribility of the wine. That is, if it is better, then it could keep for at least another 5, and if it was worse, then aim to finish stocks of that wine in the next 2-3 years.

Surprised about the 2003 Chalamber though. Would have thought that one would have been better or at least comparable the next day.

Cheers,

Monghead

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Waiters Friend
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Joined: Mon May 02, 2005 4:09 am
Location: Perth WA

Post by Waiters Friend »

G'day Wayno

Especially for reds, I keep a few half-bottles with screwcaps that I use regularly for keeping half-bottles overnight or for a few days. It's a practice I've kept up for years, and will have anything up to 6 half-bottles resting peacefully on occasions. Usually 2 days is about the limit, although I've left them up to 5.

Two things:

1. I use this primarily for reds. If I use it for whites, then it's generally for overnight storage only, although 2 days is probably OK.
2. I open the original bottle, then immediately pour half of it into the half-bottle, and seal it. However, there have been occasions where I've retrieved the half-bottle later in the night, and drink it. It's probably safer to transfer the half bottle initially, rather than pour the dregs into the bottle at the end of the night after lots of oxygen.

I'm still experimenting with the notion that some reds DEMAND a day's decanting beforehand - but I have a decanter for that purpose. Isuspect I will enjoy the experimentation for some time to come :P

Cheers
Wine, women and song. Ideally, you can experience all three at once.

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ufo
Posts: 460
Joined: Sat Sep 22, 2007 10:36 am
Location: Sydney

Post by ufo »

Waiters Friend wrote:G'day Wayno

Especially for reds, I keep a few half-bottles with screwcaps that I use regularly for keeping half-bottles overnight or for a few days. It's a practice I've kept up for years, and will have anything up to 6 half-bottles resting peacefully on occasions. Usually 2 days is about the limit, although I've left them up to 5.

Two things:

1. I use this primarily for reds. If I use it for whites, then it's generally for overnight storage only, although 2 days is probably OK.
2. I open the original bottle, then immediately pour half of it into the half-bottle, and seal it. However, there have been occasions where I've retrieved the half-bottle later in the night, and drink it. It's probably safer to transfer the half bottle initially, rather than pour the dregs into the bottle at the end of the night after lots of oxygen.

I'm still experimenting with the notion that some reds DEMAND a day's decanting beforehand - but I have a decanter for that purpose. Isuspect I will enjoy the experimentation for some time to come :P



Cheers



Good examples of wines that improve by decanting are any red of Kay Brothers of MacLaren Vale. Their cheaoer range reds taste much better next day when kept in a 375 ML bottle(cap closed) Their better range (Hillside and specially Old Block 6) definetely reuire ,minimum a full day decanting/breathing for optimum enjoyment.

nealm
Posts: 14
Joined: Tue Jul 08, 2008 4:00 pm

Post by nealm »

I bought some el-cheapo Kilikanoon shiraz cleanskins for $10 a pop and it is a completely different wine after a day. May be because it's so young, but its nearly undrinkable at first and then just opens right up and is very approachable - much lighter, almost granache-like.

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