Whining&dining
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- Jul 7, 2016
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I look forward to your dissection of said wine BF and will keep my powder dry in the interim...
Is it Keep or Kick?[FONT=&]I've ordered a case, if it's not a better wine than the Squid Ink or not nearly as good as the Giant Squid Ink it will go back. I have a recent vintage of both to compare.[/FONT]
Is it Keep or Kick?
https://vinomofo.com/wines/red-wine/hart-of-the-barossa-the-brave-shiraz-2013
A corky..
looks good. 94 points..anybody tried this?
The 2012 (under screwcap) was an excellent buy, I think this one would be similar (corks willing), but I won't be buying due to the cork seal.
I've just sent a shot across the bows on this one, it promises to be a cracking red and in regard to the cork-closure the romantic in me says what the hell....(there's always the 100% money back guarantee)
I'm sure it (most bottles) will be fine. It's when you strike the musty or oxidised or tainted one or two a couple of years later. At this price, it's not a big issue, I just prefer not to buy cork-sealed wines.
Now what is this "Originally bound for a prestigious buyer in China, this gorgeous vino fell victim to a labelling technicality"?My heart sank when I read it was a cork enclosure. Loved the 2012 also.
The 2012 wine was a lovely drop (was also rated 94) and I have 4 to go from the last FO buy. I am in.https://vinomofo.com/wines/red-wine/hart-of-the-barossa-the-brave-shiraz-2013
A corky..
looks good. 94 points..anybody tried this?
Now what is this "Originally bound for a prestigious buyer in China, this gorgeous vino fell victim to a labelling technicality"?
I suppose the Chinese market much prefer cork than stelvin.
I await the results having bought a case myself. CheersPutting it up to my Monday Tasting Group tonight, along with 2014, 2010 Squid Ink and 2010 Giant Squid Ink and a couple of other Shiraz. Should be a fair test.
My heart sank when I read it was a cork enclosure. Loved the 2012 also.
I await the results having bought a case myself. Cheers
I think RB had the right approach in terms of buy-in price and cellaring longevity. I know for my part I have wines from 2001, 2002, 2003 etc under cork in my modest cellar and none to my knowledge have been affected by cork taint/spoilage. I think there has been a lot of adverse press over cork closures that has put the fear of God (probably Bacchus) into many wine consumers but on an empirical basis i.e. personal experience I have had very few wines indeed over the last 35 years or so that have been affected. Having said that, I know there have been ongoing massive s**t-storms on-line over the pros and cons of Stelvin versus cork and I would not wish to bring that plague upon this fair forum![]()
Yes, but the 2012 was under stelvin and the back label on the bottles I received didn't have an export label.Same blurb as on last offer
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I think RB had the right approach in terms of buy-in price and cellaring longevity. I know for my part I have wines from 2001, 2002, 2003 etc under cork in my modest cellar and none to my knowledge have been affected by cork taint/spoilage. I think there has been a lot of adverse press over cork closures that has put the fear of God (probably Bacchus) into many wine consumers but on an empirical basis i.e. personal experience I have had very few wines indeed over the last 35 years or so that have been affected. Having said that, I know there have been ongoing massive s**t-storms on-line over the pros and cons of Stelvin versus cork and I would not wish to bring that plague upon this fair forum![]()
You are very lucky or fairly insensitive to taint.
Tasmania may be the pits for wine delivery, but for storage the mild climes are probably a lot better than other parts of Australia. My personal experience is mainly informed by a case of Ring-Bolt Cabernet from a good year that I put down for 10 years or so and then consumed all of in the space of 6 months or so. None were undrinkable but there was an unbelievable amount of bottle variation. The trouble with bottle variation is that you say, "Wow this is really good, I must save some of this for special occasions," and then you bring some out on a special occasion and find yourself saying, "Wow, this is incredibly ordinary, I can't believe I'm serving this." Of course it never happens the other way around, not only because of Murphy's Law, but because you wouldn't contemplate serving an ordinary wine on a special occasion.
ANYWAY, all that being said, I am still prepared to trust Diam a good bit more than solid natural cork, but I don't imagine VM would make the distinction; would be interested in hearing what this one is under from anyone who's gone the boom.
ANYWAY, all that being said, I am still prepared to trust Diam a good bit more than solid natural cork, but I don't imagine VM would make the distinction; would be interested in hearing what this one is under from anyone who's gone the boom.