I'm thinking that provenance should be higher up .Roy Hersh wrote:Luc,
Let's just say that the two items I voted for, are way down the list % wise.
Idealy It could tip the balance on whether or not a bottle is purchased .

Moderators: Glenn E., Roy Hersh, Andy Velebil
I'm thinking that provenance should be higher up .Roy Hersh wrote:Luc,
Let's just say that the two items I voted for, are way down the list % wise.
That's tough. I haven't tried the Hutcheson and it is perfectly stored.Glenn E. wrote: Here's a question for you: would you purchase a perfectly stored case of 1982 Hutcheson VP or a case of 1985 Fonseca VP with unknown provenance?
Glenn ,Glenn E. wrote:I agree that provenance is important, but since it is frequently not known (at least with internet purchases) I can't get too worked up about it. That's why I rely more on producer and vintage when narrowing down my purchasing decisions - those are (usually) known quantities.
Here's a question for you: would you purchase a perfectly stored case of 1982 Hutcheson VP or a case of 1985 Fonseca VP with unknown provenance?
I'll take the chairs. Even a poorly stored chair is probably pretty good, no matter the brand. But a poorly stored Macintosh?Roy Hersh wrote:But Glenn's question (the '82H vs. '85F) is like using an analogy comparing apples and chairs.
That's deliberate because the poll made us pick between apples, chairs, bottled spring water, and hotel reservations.Roy Hersh wrote:But Glenn's question (the '82H vs. '85F) is like using an analogy comparing apples and chairs.
An excellent point, though even a couple of years of poor storage on a young VP could affect the eventual result once the Port is opened years (if not decades) later.Lamont Huxley wrote:I think that there's a definite relationship between vintage and provenance - the older the vintage, the more important provenance becomes. I'd have no problem picking up an '03 or '07 VP sitting on the shelf in a store with suspect storage conditions - how much damage could really be done to a young VP in just a couple years on the shelf? However, if I was buying a '63 or '77 I would be much more concerned with how it was stored.
That's really what it boils down to for me. Abuse - long term poor storage - will certainly kill a Port, but a year or three of somewhat less than perfect storage isn't going to have a major impact on most Ports.Russ Kimmitt wrote:These are damn tough wines, compared to almost anything. They can withstand even the worst of reasonable conditions, and were designed to do so.
So for you, producer and year would seem to be the most important given that statement.Roy Hersh wrote:I doubt I'd buy 1982 Hutcheson even if it was under $10 per bottle, but that's not the point.
Exactly! But not really a newbe issue, as anyone buying ANY older bottle of wine rarely knows the full provenance of where they bottles spent their entire life. The exception would be a just released ex-cellars. Even a seemingly "well stored" bottle "bought on release*" can have issues. Refrigerated containers are a relatively new thing in the shipping world so the odds are all of your wine shipped prior to the 80's (if not later) was not actively cooled. A day on a hot boat, truck, car ride home from the store, is all it could take to ruin the bottle.Eric Menchen wrote: But like many newbies here, what am I going to drink this year? I have to go somewhere to find those older bottles, and ex-cellars bottles of 1970 Taylor just aren't being released on a regular basis. So I do the best I can, and if I end up buying two unknown bottles of which one turns out to be great and one just so-so, that's acceptable to me. So far every bottle I've bought I thought was worth the price I paid.
Barney had a passive cellar if I am not mistaken. The fact that he was a discerning collector just meant that he got in early and also had the discretionary income to invest heavily in wine, top notch wine at that. He was a lover of (and owned a massive stash of) Port and Madeira and sadly, there was next to none offered up ... which was quite telling.I'm not saying all old bottles are bad, not even close to that. But the provenance issue sometimes get a little blown out of proportion. Just look at how many leakers were recently sold by a famous wine collector in the Napa area, bought on release, and stored by him, yet hyped as to what a discerning collector he was, yada, yada yada. Well he obviously didn't care about storage or he wouldn't have had all those leakers! Of course that is an extreme example but does illustrate my point.
So what you're saying is that in tastings where vintage (1955) and/or producer ("Best of the '80s") are already a given that provenance is about as likely to have an impact as TCA infection?Roy Hersh wrote:Often times when going to large tastings, (the recent 1980's VP tasting here in Seattle and the 1955 VP horizontal last Oct. in London are both good examples) the difference that provenance makes is truly revealed. In both of the aforementioned examples, there were bottles that did not show well or live up to their expectations based on large samplings of tasting the same producer and vintage.