Levi Dalton
Levi Dalton
originally posted by Tom Glasgow:
Shhh, Cru Beajolais was considered a great bargain and now see what's happened. Of course oxidized wines can separate the ____ from the ___.originally posted by Levi Dalton:
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
I experimented with Sherries a few years ago because of discussions like this one. I liked the flavors, but had a hard time dealing with the high abv in the context of a meal. Since - I thought, at least - fino and Manzanilla needed to be drunk up once opened, my wife and I were in the position of polishing off a 15% bottle in an evening, which is too much for us to enjoy, generally speaking. Halves and 500's would be practical, though.
On price, I just don't buy in that range. If wine is your living, in one way or another, then the cost picture changes radically, naturally.
Certainly, I take both your points. That being said, I don't really see the issue about having to drink a full 750ml of high alcohol beverage in an evening as a reality. El Maestro Sierra, La Cigarrera, Hidalgo (La Gitana), Gutierrez Colosia, Bodegas Argueso, Toro Albala, Pedro Romero, Valdespino, and others bottle a Fino or Manzanilla in 375ml or 500ml. That is some good stuff to choose from in small format right there. Also, I think the need to drink everything in an entire night is overstated. A good friend of mine likes his Pedro Romero "Aurora" on day three from the refrigerator. That's when he thinks it shows at its best.
Also, the buy in for a number of these same producers is quite low. A 500ml of that Pedro Romero "Aurora" would run about $12/btl at retail. A 375ml of El Maestro Sierra Fino is about $16/btl. La Cigarrera Manzanilla, Toro Albala Fino, and Bodegas Argueso Manzanilla in 375ml are all about $12/btl. Gutierrez Colosia Fino is $13 or $14/btl. And these are all good wines.
I understand why you wouldn't want to buy a 750ml bottle of Equipo Navazos at retail for $60, but then that is where restaurants come in. We serve 2 Equipo Navazos wines by the glass at a place I am familiar with. One is $9/glass, the other is $10/glass. Honestly, that sounds seems resonable to me, for again, what I think to be some of the finest wines available from anywhere in the world at the moment.
It's different in that sherry drinkers would most definitely benefit from there being more sherry drinkers.
If the price of, say, El Maestro Sierra went up $4/btl that might suck a little bit. But if it were disappearing off shelves left and right, and shipments were brought in more often as a result, that would lead to a demonstrably better beverage for most people in the end, due to the freshness factor.