originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
Apparently, he just wanted to fit in.
originally posted by Rahsaan:
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
Apparently, he just wanted to fit in.
Crazy.
Almost as laughable as this defense: his defense lawyer, Jerome Mooney, said that the rare wine market is plagued by counterfeits and that buying and selling fakes is common.
That type of defense doesn't pass muster for a 7-year old explaining why he ate all the candy, I sure hope it doesn't have firmer ground for a 37-year old explaining fraud and theft!
Ponsot’s Clos de la Roche is the reference standard for this vineyard. Ponsot is easily the largest holder in Clos de la Roche and has the lion’s share of the original core of the vineyard. This is a wine of extraordinary power; however it will need a number of years to reach maturity. For those of you who wait you will be rewarded with a magnificent wine of immense complexity and class. This is one of the all-time great Burgundy’s
2009 Domaine Ponsot Clos de la Roche Vieilles Vignes
This impressively complete wine offers up very ripe aromas of spice, earth and game that introduce strikingly rich, naturally sweet and mouth coating big-bodied flavors that explode on the formidably long finish. This is a classy wine with absolutely superb complexity, impeccable balance and almost uncanny presence, all delivered with grace and power. Be prepared to be patient however as this will need plenty of time. A 'wow' wine that possess excellent verve, especially within the context of the '09 vintage.
96 points Burghound
$699 per bottle
This wine is limited all orders subject to confirmation
Fine stuff, no doubt, but no '59.originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
2009 Domaine Ponsot Clos de la Roche Vieilles Vignes
96 points Burghound
$699 per bottle
originally posted by SFJoe:
Fine stuff, no doubt, but no '59.originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
2009 Domaine Ponsot Clos de la Roche Vieilles Vignes
96 points Burghound
$699 per bottle
originally posted by Rahsaan:
Well now that this Master Villain is taken care of, are there any ideas about how many other bad apples are out there and whether it will be easier/harder for them to operate now?
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
originally posted by Rahsaan:
Well now that this Master Villain is taken care of, are there any ideas about how many other bad apples are out there and whether it will be easier/harder for them to operate now?
The problem was widespread before Rudy, and there's no reason to believe that just because he was arrested and now convicted, everyone else decided to pack it in and go straight. Especially since Rudy raised the prices dramatically for so many wines, thereby greatly increasing the potential profits.
There's an Acker, Merrall, Cohen wine auction today. You might want to look at the catalog on line and decide for yourself whether all looks in order: http://ackerwines.co/Catalogs/139_FINAL_WEB.PDF.
originally posted by Tristan Welles:
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
originally posted by Rahsaan:
Well now that this Master Villain is taken care of, are there any ideas about how many other bad apples are out there and whether it will be easier/harder for them to operate now?
The problem was widespread before Rudy, and there's no reason to believe that just because he was arrested and now convicted, everyone else decided to pack it in and go straight. Especially since Rudy raised the prices dramatically for so many wines, thereby greatly increasing the potential profits.
There's an Acker, Merrall, Cohen wine auction today. You might want to look at the catalog on line and decide for yourself whether all looks in order: http://ackerwines.co/Catalogs/139_FINAL_WEB.PDF.
Some very, what's the word, desirable fill levels in those bottles. all must be from unique provenance.
originally posted by Claude Kolm: