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Don't tread on me!
Pennsylvania Frank
Better than Viagra!
Cain 5 Meritage is pretty good about $35 a bottle.
If you walk into a high end grocery in No. California there a probably close to 150 different red wines alone. Figure 30-50 each in
Cabernet, Merlot, Zinfindel, Meritage...
Those are just the California's
You are kinda asking what is the best deer cartridge....cause anything from .243 to 35 Whelen is in the mix.
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MED
The sole purpose of a rifle is to please its owner
Bakes
Any good Aussie Dry White.
New Zealand also make some excellent wines.
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Handgun Hunter
LOVE THOSE .41s'
[This message has been edited by Crawfish (edited 03-13-2002).]
It used to be 30 bucks could buy you one of these, now, try 3000.
California wines are pretty much grossly over priced, as are the best french wines.
The best values are champagne, and Chateau D'Yquem, by far the best wine in the world, but, a desert wine.
If you can find a decent chilean wine, they are some of the best cab values.
The beauty of french wines is a blending of the different grapes makes a more rounded, more complex tasting wine, in most cases.
Since labels sell, merlot, and cabernet require 85% of the wine in the bottle match the label.
So, to protect the consumer, Kalifornia requires this, with the end result that Kalifornia wines tend to be one dimensional.
I could go into the difference of valley grapes, and mountain side grapes in Napa, the better vineyards, Heitz, BV, Mt. Eden Valley Vineyards, etc. if you like.
I am a big fan of BV, the latour series in particular.
Their 1951 was probably the best California red wine I've ever had.
The best bordeaux, 1953 Chateau Petrus, and I've had a couple 1870 Madiera's that would knock your socks off.
gs
Cabernet, Merlot, Zinfindel, Meritage..."
And, 95 % of it is over priced garbage.
Course I think the same of most of the bordeauxs, but not champagnes, or sauternes.
gs
Barossa Valley Shiraz (or Syrah). Try some of the old vine shiraz. Numerous ones to try. Send me an email if you are interested.
And then a good Cabernet Sauvignon is very nice, or a well made varietal grenache or grenache blend goes down well. A nicely chilled crisp Riesling, a buttery caramel Semillon, a ......... I could keep going.
From elsewhere I love Rioja and Cava from Spain. And many many Italian and French wines.....
The good thing about wine is that every variety, every region, every country, every vintage and every bottle can be a little bit different. So you always have to keep trying them, a new one or one you've had many times.
Also good to see the Ozzie hunters sticking up for the local drop.
Enjoy!
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Nitro@NitroExpress.com
NitroExpress.com
The best wines for my money are from Chile. One of my favorite Chilean is Los Vascos (from the Maipo Valley), a superb wine that has many flavors dancing on your palate yet is inexpensive enough to use as a regular table wine (it is excellent with venison)
I disagree that 95% of California wines are junk. California is making some very good wines these days, as are the Aussies. There are outstanding wines from all-over... depends what you like. I like the "flinty" flavor of the southern French over the "full-bodied, oaky" flavor of the Californian.
Little Known Fact: The state of Missouri "saved" the French wine industry around the turn of the century after the vineyards (in the south) were wiped out by some sort of blight... the state shiped tens-of-thousands of grape-vines to France. There's a nice memorial to the good people of Missouri in Montpellier.
Another Fact: Missouri, in the 19th century, was the largest producer of wine in the US.
Brad
I know a little bit in wine. There are some new great countries in good wine field such as Australia, Argentina, Chile and USA (California).
Don't forget one thing nearly all vineyards in France are US vines because of "phyloxera" --> vines illness in 19th century.
I have visited some french areas for good wines. Alsace for white wines, Bourgogne for red wines,.... I'm 29 and I have the rest of my life to discover others wine areas in France (mainly).
All these areas are great because if have the luck to meet some "real" producers not sellers.
In France there is two kinds of wine producers who propose their wines for free dinks
one for tourists (american, japanese,...) and the others for local poeple (and me).
That take time and you need to know a little bit the area to find a good producer with good quality of wine.
The most famous castel name in wine isn't necessarily the best wine. But only the highest purchase price.
I love all french wines but not "table wines". I prefer to drink good quality wine sometimes than bad wine every days. IMHO.
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BER007
Keep the faith in any circumstances
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BBER007@HOTMAIL.COM
I had the plesure to get a guided tour in Barossa by a benchrest mate down in OZ last Dec.
I had some really outstanding whines that day Among lots of exellent whines I tried the basket press at Rockfords. I have to say that I really whish I could get my hands on a few bottles of that whine here in Sweden... I got the impression that it was very hard to get even in Australia due to very limited numbers of bottles turned out every year.
I can get some really good Australian whines here in Sweden. One is the Penfolds Bin 28 Shiraz. It�s about $14 US here but a really enjoyable drop! At least in my opinion
Cheers!
Stefan.
Your chardonnay is good. Not Plumpjack good, but quite tasty.
Then there are some fine wines to more modest prices, which are quite enjoyable: Barbera and Barolo from Italy, Ch�teau-Neuf-du-Pape and C�te-du-Rh�ne from France or perhaps some Riserva from Rioja in Spain. They are all fine with game or cheese.
White wine with fish is preferably a Chablis from France or a Franconian white from Germany, and white wine for just drinking can be a sweet Sp�tlese from Rhine or Mosel in Germany. For sweet deserts I like a Hungarian Tokaji or - best! - a French Sauterne.
Best regards,
Fritz
[This message has been edited by Fritz Kraut (edited 03-13-2002).]
[This message has been edited by Fritz Kraut (edited 03-13-2002).]
Oh, you said wine, not WHINE. Sorry.
R-WEST
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"the spotlight of truth will cause the cockroaches of deceit to run for cover every time"
Rush Limbaugh
[This message has been edited by R-WEST (edited 03-14-2002).]
JohnTheGreek
I can't tell you how many cases I had to throw away, of 'great, vintage, cabernets' that turned out to be over oaked, out of balance garbage, after aging.
VERY few California cabs are well enough made to age well.
Generally, the better aging wines start out with a massive amount of fruit, masking the
other characteristics. Cali wines start out with oak, the fruit fades, and you get to chew on a splinter for some huge amount of money.
The rhones, Gigondas, in particular, are fantastic, but, they used to be MUCH cheaper.
LaTour, 1928, 45, 47, 59, 61, 53, 55, not 54,
62, was a fantastic value, 64, and 66 likewise, 69, good in a really off year, and cheap, those, are truly great wines.
The pre 45 vintages show the great difference the phyloxera grafting makes. Great stuff.
Chilean wines, if you find the right blend, rival great bordeauxs, for a fraction of the price. I'm not naming them, since, if I do, you guys are going to drive the price up by buying them.
My girlfriend is in Austria right now, raving about how cheap great wine is, because you don't have to pay tariffs.
YOu guys are just like your choice in firearms, big and robust, with the syrah, rhones, etc.
gs
My favorite french wines generally comes from the ste Estephe district
gs
[This message has been edited by Socrates (edited 03-16-2002).]