Confessions of a Wine Snob

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He actually suffers from an addiction to names.It is quite common.There are very good wines that dont come at a great price.I accidently learnt this when I started buying wines.A good friends father worked for Lindeman's and gave some good advice on what to look for if you wanted to cellar wines.So I bought a case of Tyrrell's Pokolbin Dry Red 1969 at the exorbitant price of 60 cents a bottle.Stored it under my bed.Moved out of home in 1970 and forgot about it.1978 and my mother tells me they decide to make my old bedroom a sunroom and so found said case of wine.By this time I was living in the Hunter and a member of a wine club.I thought of just throwing the case out but decided to try it first.It was sensational.So took it along as a blind tasting to the club and it was received very well.Total shock when I revealed the label.
So again the best wine is always the wine you like.We are all different so there are a host of "best" wines.
 
He actually suffers from an addiction to names.It is quite common.There are very good wines that dont come at a great price.I accidently learnt this when I started buying wines.A good friends father worked for Lindeman's and gave some good advice on what to look for if you wanted to cellar wines.So I bought a case of Tyrrell's Pokolbin Dry Red 1969 at the exorbitant price of 60 cents a bottle.Stored it under my bed.Moved out of home in 1970 and forgot about it.1978 and my mother tells me they decide to make my old bedroom a sunroom and so found said case of wine.By this time I was living in the Hunter and a member of a wine club.I thought of just throwing the case out but decided to try it first.It was sensational.So took it along as a blind tasting to the club and it was received very well.Total shock when I revealed the label.
So again the best wine is always the wine you like.We are all different so there are a host of "best" wines.

Very true.. And with grape and winery contracts generally only signed on set volumes the overflow is then sold as bulk at greatly reduced costs at a wholesale and retail level.

It wasn't long ago that there was a $5 adelaide hills clean skin on the market which was an oversell of a brand which was marketed at over $40/bottle.
 
I think from time to time I too am a bit of a wine snob. However I'm not so flush that I will turn my nose up a a bottle of sub $20.00 Vin Ordinaire ! In fact one of the great advantages of living in this country is the abundance of great and inexpensive wines. I don't have many "good" glasses , but I get by. My dear old mum once said "I may drink cheap wine, but I drink it from good crystal glasses".
 
Through work I've had a lot of opportunities to drink a lot of nice wines in a lot of nice places.

I'm probably happiest at home drinking in the $10-$15 range, maybe $25 if I'm feeling lavish or have guests. And I think I get to about 90%–95% of the quality of the fancy stuff. Close enough that I don't care, anyway.

I've also noticed that the same wine can taste very different depending on the company you're keeping.
 
He actually suffers from an addiction to names.It is quite common.There are very good wines that dont come at a great price.I accidently learnt this when I started buying wines.A good friends father worked for Lindeman's and gave some good advice on what to look for if you wanted to cellar wines.So I bought a case of Tyrrell's Pokolbin Dry Red 1969 at the exorbitant price of 60 cents a bottle.Stored it under my bed.Moved out of home in 1970 and forgot about it.1978 and my mother tells me they decide to make my old bedroom a sunroom and so found said case of wine.By this time I was living in the Hunter and a member of a wine club.I thought of just throwing the case out but decided to try it first.It was sensational.So took it along as a blind tasting to the club and it was received very well.Total shock when I revealed the label.
So again the best wine is always the wine you like.We are all different so there are a host of "best" wines.

Reminds me of some Tyrrell's Long Flat Red bought out of a "specials" bin from a shop in Broadway back around the early 1970s. They reckoned some bottles might be suspect, having not been stored correctly so "no guarantees, refunds" etc. While they only lasted a couple of years they were brilliant. Took me another trip to clean them out after trying the first bottle the week after I bought the first lot, and I think it was something like $0.69 each! Probably got about 15 bottles from memory and eked them out over a couple of years as it was back when everything I earned and a bit more went in to getting a house. A one off experience sadly never repeated despite returning occasionally to the half-barrel specials bin at the same shop over a number of years.

Last week I picked up some 2010 Shiraz from what was to me an unknown winemaker for <$20, and it drank very well.
 
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