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Re: Wine snobbery
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Re: Wine snobbery
[QUOTE=Margaret Pilkington;1254707]L
I do not know who come up with the descriptions of the posh wines, but I think in the main, they are phooey.....and phoney too. If someone tells you that a wine tastes of something and you believe them...then that is what you will taste. That said.....I could not care less about their opinions....if I am having a glass of something, it has to be because it is what I like...rather than some written codswallop that is meant to make those who can taste those things f the emporar,s new clothes come to mind. |
Re: Wine snobbery
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That it took you back to a memorable time...perhaps an incident that made you smile...is all that matters Less. |
Re: Wine snobbery
I know nowt about wine, but a quick flick round the web found this bottle in an auction house website sale result which sold for £1300. It would choke me.
https://bid.tennants.co.uk/m/lot-det...955%3Fpage%3D2 |
Re: Wine snobbery
i call bottles like that chateau dickheads.;)
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Re: Wine snobbery
Cashy, they do not care what you think about them, because if they can spend that on one bottle of wine then they do not circulate in our orbit.
Personally, I would rather have a mug of builders brew and a slice of cherry cake. See, I told you I was a pleb. |
Re: Wine snobbery
Guinness I was reading again the first post you wrote when starting this thread and I have a question for you. Why do you belong to a wine club when you evidently don’t have much respect for the opinions of those running it? It would be so much easier to just visit your local bottle shop and buy what you enjoy drinking. You could even buy wine that you are not familiar with and give it a try without waiting for someone else to do this for you. You say you are a tightwad, well it seems to me that you are actually wasting money by being a member of that club.
If you are really interested in wine, why not buy a couple of books about the subject and educate yourself on the making of wine right from the preparation of the soil the grapes grow in to the end result. You would learn why the different blends, the different flavours, which grapes are used for the different wines, and perhaps it would help you understand why the different prices (although I agree that some are very much overpriced to my way of thinking). There is so much that goes into producing the bottle that eventually lands on your table, I think you might find it very interesting. I wonder if by telling us that you belong to a wine club, and then belittling the choice of wine (drain cleaner?) and the description made by whoever runs the club, might in fact be a wee bit of snobbery on your part. |
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Re: Wine snobbery
[QUOTE=Mark2009;1254724]I know nowt about wine, but a quick flick round the web found this bottle in an auction house website sale result which sold for £1300. It would choke me.
in the words of the yorkshireman, How Much. |
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Market influences mate, if folk want something that badly they'll pay over & above the odds if it is the only way they can get their mitts on it, more so if it is a limited resource. |
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But they won't open it, they wont share the joy with friends, it doesn't matter, the damned thing is probably corked anyway. |
Re: Wine snobbery
[QUOTE=monkey hanger;1254744]
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And isn’t that a sad thing...that it will not be opened to celebrate a birth, an engagement, a coming of age, a recovery from ill health, something that is a landmark event and deserves a toast. It will languish in a dark cellar, when the liquid sunshine should be liberated to give pleasure. The grapes would die in shame. |
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