I am not sure where to place this for discussion so I will try here.
Last night, we had dinner at our home with my daughter and her family. I was going through my stock of store bought wines and found two Brunellos from 2001. I was thinking that would be a nice "go with" for our roasted filet so I opened one. I noted that the cork was fine and in tact and there were no off odors but the color of the wine was off, slightly brownish so I was not very optimistic. I decanted the wine into a carafe to let it breathe and got the other bottle just in case. It had a much better color so I decanted it into another carafe.
As the wine sat in the carafes, I noticed that there was a visible change in color of the first wine from the brownish to a nicer red. The taste had also improved somewhat, but was still not what I expected. The second wine also improved in color to a very nice, deep red and the taste was dry and awesome. When our family arrived and tried both they did not like the first and preferred the second which disappeared in a matter of minutes.
I had paid about $60 for each bottle a number of years ago and was reluctant to just pitch the first wine. I had a "QA" bottle of a one year old Amarone that I had just bottled so I tried adding some of that to the first wine in my glass. A significant improvement! So, I added the rest of the bottle of Amarone to the carafe, swirled it gently and all agreed that the wine was very nice.
Now, because of my keenly developed "cellar palate" I am not into vintage wines and I have some questions:
1. Is the color change a typical result in the "breathing" process?
2. My cellar maintains a fairly constant temperature between 60 and 65 degrees F. Because the cork was in tact and there were no off odors in the wine, what could have happened to it? I did note in the first bottle after decanting, there was a very significant amount of sediment in very large chunks when I rinsed the bottle.
3. I know that some vintages age better and longer than others. Do I need to research the 2001 vintage of Brunello to see what the performance of this has been?
I have a couple of others still in the cellar, among which is a 2003 Barolo. I hope it has survived whatever affected bottle 1 of the Brunello.
Thanks for your help and any insight provided.
Last night, we had dinner at our home with my daughter and her family. I was going through my stock of store bought wines and found two Brunellos from 2001. I was thinking that would be a nice "go with" for our roasted filet so I opened one. I noted that the cork was fine and in tact and there were no off odors but the color of the wine was off, slightly brownish so I was not very optimistic. I decanted the wine into a carafe to let it breathe and got the other bottle just in case. It had a much better color so I decanted it into another carafe.
As the wine sat in the carafes, I noticed that there was a visible change in color of the first wine from the brownish to a nicer red. The taste had also improved somewhat, but was still not what I expected. The second wine also improved in color to a very nice, deep red and the taste was dry and awesome. When our family arrived and tried both they did not like the first and preferred the second which disappeared in a matter of minutes.
I had paid about $60 for each bottle a number of years ago and was reluctant to just pitch the first wine. I had a "QA" bottle of a one year old Amarone that I had just bottled so I tried adding some of that to the first wine in my glass. A significant improvement! So, I added the rest of the bottle of Amarone to the carafe, swirled it gently and all agreed that the wine was very nice.
Now, because of my keenly developed "cellar palate" I am not into vintage wines and I have some questions:
1. Is the color change a typical result in the "breathing" process?
2. My cellar maintains a fairly constant temperature between 60 and 65 degrees F. Because the cork was in tact and there were no off odors in the wine, what could have happened to it? I did note in the first bottle after decanting, there was a very significant amount of sediment in very large chunks when I rinsed the bottle.
3. I know that some vintages age better and longer than others. Do I need to research the 2001 vintage of Brunello to see what the performance of this has been?
I have a couple of others still in the cellar, among which is a 2003 Barolo. I hope it has survived whatever affected bottle 1 of the Brunello.
Thanks for your help and any insight provided.
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