Expensive bottles, what prompts you to buy?

I have wondered what prompts folks to buy expensive bottles of wine and wha t do you consider expensive. We are getting to the point that we're not sur e of storing wine for 20 years as we never get to drink it. Yes, more winer ies are making wine for earlier drinking time but there are still plenty of expensive bottles that need a long time. What does this group consider to be a reasonable upper range of price for n ear term drinking?

Reply to
lleichtman
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I'm sure that we vary a great deal with respect to our finances, so we don't all have the same budget. But as for me, I seldom spend more that $10-15 US for a bottle.

Reply to
Ken Blake

what do you consider expensive. We are getting to the point that we're not sure of storing wine for 20 years as we never get to drink it. Yes, more w ineries are making wine for earlier drinking time but there are still plent y of expensive bottles that need a long time.

or near term drinking?

My upper max is generally $40-50 so finances, I know are an issue. I have f riends who buy $100 bottles and I don't.

Reply to
lleichtman

hat do you consider expensive. We are getting to the point that we're not s ure of storing wine for 20 years as we never get to drink it. Yes, more win eries are making wine for earlier drinking time but there are still plenty of expensive bottles that need a long time.

near term drinking?

Generally I consider $65 as my upper limit but I rarely buy much wine these days except for short term white wines. I have a cellar full of reds from the 90's and 2000's with some dating back to the 60's so these days I buy the occasional new world pinot.

Reply to
Bi!!

hat do you consider expensive. We are getting to the point that we're not s ure of storing wine for 20 years as we never get to drink it. Yes, more win eries are making wine for earlier drinking time but there are still plenty of expensive bottles that need a long time.

near term drinking?

OK, I'm the outlier here. I don't randomly buy a lot of expensive wines, bu t I certainly spend more than $100/bottle several times a year. Most of tha t is for mature bottles, but not all.

I'm not a rich guy (I make about what a teacher or new cop makes around h ere), but I am quite penurious about most things. I drive a battered '96 Co rolla, live in a 1000 sq ft house, buy my clothing at thrift shops or Kohls , seldom take vacations, eat leftovers at my desk for lunch. Which leaves m e money to buy $100 bottles of wine sometimes.

For everyday drinking, most of my wine buying is in the $10-25 range. Pepie re Muscadet, Pernot or Matrot Bourgogne, Donnhoff Qba, Pieropan Soave, vari ous Edmunds St Johns, Loire Cab Franc from Breton or Baudry, good Beaujolai s, etc. But sometimes I splurge.

Reply to
DaleW

You can basically substitute Dale's answer for my own, except that I go above the $100 a bottle mark probably once per year on average. This I attribute to the "cringe factor," which has crept upward on me over the years. When I first started buying wines (ca. 1981), $15 a bottle seemed like an extravagance that would take much justification; by the end of grad school ('88), I would buy the occasional Grand Cru Classé Bordeaux for up to $50 a bottle as a huge extravagance (graduation and birthday presents), and that only once or twice a year. I've actually lowered my ceiling in recent years because of Andrew's presence in our lives and because, like Dale, I find so many excellent wines in the $10-30 a bottle range. For an everyday drinker, I'd say my limit of comfort is $20 a bottle. For things to go into the cellar, I don't blink if it's under $40 a bottle, but anything above that requires a gov't grade justification (in triplicate), and -- again like Dale -- that most frequently occurs when I'm buying older wines at auction.

Mark Lipton

Reply to
Mark Lipton

I have certainly bought a lot of wine over the years in the $100+ category I stopped buying older wines except in rare instances...I will buy Clos St Hune when available, Silex or certain vintages of Vintage Port. As I have a fairly large cellar of wines that are coming of age i don't really seek o ut old bottles much any more as I have been dissapointed far too many times and old white Burgundies have totally lost their appeal with the Premox is sue. I have recent;y bought a few older bolttles of CNP from the cellar of a friend where I knew the history of the wine.

Reply to
Bi!!

hat do you consider expensive. We are getting to the point that we're not s ure of storing wine for 20 years as we never get to drink it. Yes, more win eries are making wine for earlier drinking time but there are still plenty of expensive bottles that need a long time.

near term drinking?

I still have a fairly large collection, so I seldom buy wines for long agin g anymore. Of course I have to replace a few whites not meant for long agin g. Very rarely I buy a bottle of rare wine that I could not find earlier an d wish to taste at least once while I still can. Such wines have included v ery old Constantia, very old Tokaji Essencia back to the early 1800's,vinta ge Madeira back to the early 1800's etc. However many of these can no longe r be found or are now extremely expensive,so I have bought nearly none of s uch wines in the last decade. I do admit that I have paid over US$ 1000 for a very rare wine in the past, but I also bought 1st growth Bordeaux from 1

961 and 1959 for about $11 to 30 not long after release. I have drunk or di scarded most of my mistakes, so most of the older wines I have left are sti ll very good.
Reply to
cwdjrxyz

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