* the neighbor was cleaning a newly purchased property this week and shared a ten year old grosch bottle of strawberry. . . .
appearance: clear, light transparent orange (some brown notes) color, ,, typical of year old state fair samples = 3 points
aroma: good identifiable strawberry = 3 points
flavor: missing front notes (old), the longer acid notes were present, = 3 out of 6 points
aftertaste: clean, no off notes, fast not lingering
overall: one of the best strawberries I have sampled (note most strawberry wine is missing front notes and a fresh/bright pink color) 2 points (I would have been tempted to add 1% of a stable red color as raspberry juice)
ie ,, technically age is possible, this would point out as a low blue ribbon wine
appearance: clear, light transparent orange (some brown notes) color, ,, typical of year old state fair samples = 3 points
aroma: good identifiable strawberry = 3 points
flavor: missing front notes (old), the longer acid notes were present, = 3 out of 6 points
aftertaste: clean, no off notes, fast not lingering
overall: one of the best strawberries I have sampled (note most strawberry wine is missing front notes and a fresh/bright pink color) 2 points (I would have been tempted to add 1% of a stable red color as raspberry juice)
ie ,, technically age is possible, this would point out as a low blue ribbon wine
I heard when I first got started that Strawberry has a shorter shelf life than other wines but since then I've hear a variety of things. I should guess that 2-3 years will be fine.
As far as aging time - I think most folks count aging time from end of fermentation until you open the bottle to drink. You can age it in bulk or in a bottle. The reason many more folks age in a bulk (Carboy/Barrel - At least a year in most cases) is so that they can make any needed adjustments, filter, back-sweeten, change pH, and of course avoid any surprise sediment dropping out before they lock it down in a bottle.