Told a friend I had a few wines in the cellar and his response was to ask if I turned them regularly

As far as i know, you don't touch em

Any other gems


The bottle shock thing is true, which I discovered when the winery released it's '06 Sav Blanc. The first few weeks it tasted very dull and metallic, but then it opened up suddenly and was lovely. I'm sure I'll think of more odd questions I've had another time (there's lots!).
Craig(NZ) wrote:The bottle shock thing is true, which I discovered when the winery released it's '06 Sav Blanc. The first few weeks it tasted very dull and metallic, but then it opened up suddenly and was lovely. I'm sure I'll think of more odd questions I've had another time (there's lots!).
agree, weird things happen just after bottling
i was meaning shock from transporting from a-b
James Scarcebrook wrote:Craig(NZ) wrote:The bottle shock thing is true, which I discovered when the winery released it's '06 Sav Blanc. The first few weeks it tasted very dull and metallic, but then it opened up suddenly and was lovely. I'm sure I'll think of more odd questions I've had another time (there's lots!).
agree, weird things happen just after bottling
i was meaning shock from transporting from a-b
Not yet experienced THAT phenomenon, how often is this supposed to happen? Anyone know what causes it? It scares me!
Transport bottle shock is a bit of an old wives tale I reckon. Many times I have travelled with wine and consumed a day later and been fine.
One example flew to NZ with '86 JR et al. The JR was consumed, along with some magnificent NZ lamb, in the home of Craig the friendly, and quite tame, Kiwi.
I feel Craig will back me when I say it was quite drinkable.
As yet I have not had a problem with transporting wine.
Mike.