Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Like some PPs, I only judge those people who judge others. Although personally I make it a point to never drink pink wine.
Why?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guess I meant...what does the type of wine you drink say about you, and I didn't just mean price or label.
Chardonnay = ?
Sauvignon Blanc = ?
Pinot Grigio = ?
Merlot = ?
Cabernet Sauvignon = ?
Pinot Noir = ?
Etc.
This doesn't even make sense. I drink the wine appropriate to the food. Sometimes a Pinot goes, sometimes a chardonnay. A Provencal rose goes great with Provencal seafood dishes. It's not what I would choose to have with Italian food.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I judge people who drink white zinfandel.
Seriously, I don't get the White Zin hate. I have not done a side by side tasting of a White Zin against say, a French Rose, but if you want something light and slightly sweet and unsubtle and cheap for a picnic, is the latter really a better choice?
I accidentally ordered a glass of white Zin and it was horrific. Nothing in common with a dry rose.
But I still won't judge you! God knows I have horrible taste otherwise.
Anonymous wrote:I guess I meant...what does the type of wine you drink say about you, and I didn't just mean price or label.
Chardonnay = ?
Sauvignon Blanc = ?
Pinot Grigio = ?
Merlot = ?
Cabernet Sauvignon = ?
Pinot Noir = ?
Etc.
Anonymous wrote:
Seriously, I don't get the White Zin hate. I have not done a side by side tasting of a White Zin against say, a French Rose, but if you want something light and slightly sweet and unsubtle and cheap for a picnic, is the latter really a better choice?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:8:23 - did you notice that after Sideways came out, Merlot's sales dropped and there was a LOT of sh*tty Pinot suddenly hitting the market? Pinot is a hard wine to make well - the growing conditions have to be just right - so it's kind of sad/funny that so many marginal producers were throwing it out there to capitalize on the pinot trend after that movie came out.
I think Bogle makes a great merlot. I'll happily drink merlot if that's what's available, but there aren't many reds I don't like. (I do not like grenache much.)
8:23 here ... yes, that movie (while a great flick) has done so much to distort perceptions and economics of wine ... regular grocery stores are now packed with terrible pinot (as in some of the worst wine on the market) but they've got clever labels and they're "pinot, yay, my fave!" so they sell. Meanwhile, Merlot is actually a very pleasant wine even at cheap prices, and at very high quality vineyards (e.g., Bordeaux) it is amazing. Cheap pinot is like watered down grape juice ... but it sells, entirely because of that movie.
Anonymous wrote:I love moscato. Forget you people.
Anonymous wrote:There are definitely wines I don't care for, but really people just have different tastes. Lately I've been liking Malbecs and dry Roses (ice cold, on the porch on a summer evening ... heaven!). But I know a lot of people don't care for a peppery malbec or don't care for roses. To each their own.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have to drink a lot of wine and have a pretty sensitive palate to tell the difference between a 10 bottle a 20-30 bottle (on verge of course). Drink what you like, life is short.
I wish this were true. Sadly, once you start drinking the better wines in the $20-$30 range the cheap ones really taste subpar. I still drink some cheaper ones because I'm not wealthy, but you definitely tell the difference.
LOL that you think a $30 bottle of wine is something special.
Are you kidding me? $30 for a bottle is big money - and quite frankly, I make a lot of money. It's funny because most broke pretentious people i know judge you on your wine. I had dinner with a VERY wealthy guy and loves Yellowtail. He grew up with the DuPont's kind of wealth.