Halliday's Book

The place on the web to chat about wine, Australian wines, or any other wines for that matter
Mahmoud Ali
Posts: 2954
Joined: Fri Aug 25, 2006 9:00 pm
Location: Edmonton, Canada

Re: Halliday's Book

Post by Mahmoud Ali »

Scotty vino wrote: ... and the other 50% I'm not sure I went to the same winery.


Nice one, very droll.

Mahmoud.

User avatar
phillisc
Posts: 3359
Joined: Wed Oct 20, 2010 2:24 pm
Location: Adelaide

Re: Halliday's Book

Post by phillisc »

Scotty vino wrote:As a lot of familes and friends know me to be a bit of a cork dork the Halliday book
is an easy gift. Not to stingy a gift and a good read on the throne if nothing else.
I find it to be a great data base and reference guide.
I often pick it up after a cellar door visit and compare the notes.
I would say 50% of the time I can relate/understand the reviews
and the other 50% I'm not sure I went to the same winery.

For the price and disregarding the inflated scores it's a great collated tome of winery/vino info for the coin.


Along with Graeme G's '14 St George tasting note, Scotty this could be the post of the year, nice link between me not giving a crap and you in a state of contemplation. Laughed my head off re the 50% bit...so so true :D :D

Congrats on the family addition...I can see a lot of '16 Clare/EV Rizza and a few tasty reds being purchased for the future.

Cheers
Craig
Tomorrow will be a good day

Ian S
Posts: 2696
Joined: Sat Aug 23, 2003 3:21 am
Location: Norwich, England

Re: Halliday's Book

Post by Ian S »

phillisc wrote:Ian, don't get how cellar door tastings are bribery for the average punter (apologies if i have read you wrong here).


Hi Craig
Apologies if that wasn't clear - I'm basically saying the sample wines for reviewers are as much about bribery, as being offered a wine to taste in a tasting room (or a cheeseshop offering you a sliver of cheese to taste). In my view neither are remotely near it.
regards
Ian

User avatar
phillisc
Posts: 3359
Joined: Wed Oct 20, 2010 2:24 pm
Location: Adelaide

Re: Halliday's Book

Post by phillisc »

Ian S wrote:
phillisc wrote:Ian, don't get how cellar door tastings are bribery for the average punter (apologies if i have read you wrong here).


Hi Craig
Apologies if that wasn't clear - I'm basically saying the sample wines for reviewers are as much about bribery, as being offered a wine to taste in a tasting room (or a cheeseshop offering you a sliver of cheese to taste). In my view neither are remotely near it.
regards
Ian

+1 Ian completely agree with you here. I think it would be a very different review if said scribe purchased the samples with their hard earned.

Cheers
Craig
Tomorrow will be a good day

User avatar
Scotty vino
Posts: 1120
Joined: Mon Aug 13, 2012 6:48 pm
Location: Adelaide

Re: Halliday's Book

Post by Scotty vino »

phillisc wrote:
Scotty vino wrote:As a lot of familes and friends know me to be a bit of a cork dork the Halliday book
is an easy gift. Not to stingy a gift and a good read on the throne if nothing else.
I find it to be a great data base and reference guide.
I often pick it up after a cellar door visit and compare the notes.
I would say 50% of the time I can relate/understand the reviews
and the other 50% I'm not sure I went to the same winery.

For the price and disregarding the inflated scores it's a great collated tome of winery/vino info for the coin.


Along with Graeme G's '14 St George tasting note, Scotty this could be the post of the year, nice link between me not giving a crap and you in a state of contemplation. Laughed my head off re the 50% bit...so so true :D :D

Congrats on the family addition...I can see a lot of '16 Clare/EV Rizza and a few tasty reds being purchased for the future.

Cheers
Craig


I'll definitely be on the lookout for some commemorative '16s both red and white to keep down for a while.
Might have to search the next Halliday Edition for those. :wink:
There's a fine line between fishing and just standing on the shore like an idiot.

Post Reply