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Tuesday, December 05, 2006

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Do you really want to buy wine online?

I love walking around wine shops. Especially really good ones.

Some of them have wonderful bottles of vintage wines, ports,

sherries, madeira, marsala and brandy in lovely dusty racks.

Others give you a list and you can go and actually look at a

bottle of wine that is on the list at �2000. Of course buying it

is out of the question, but you will always remember that day

when you actually touched a Rothschild '47 or whatever it was

for the rest of your life.





If you live or work in London there are some fabulous wine

merchants to window shop in. You can potter around the more

expensive areas of the West End and discover a cornucopia of

wine shops with superb wines from all over the world. Many

specialise in the more expensive vintages.





Looking round these emporiums is a bit like taking a kid into a

sweetshop. You look at all these wines that you have read about

only in fables and decide that you will have a bottle of

'house-red' thanks. You can't tell the be-suited gentleman

behind the wooden counter that your bank manager would have a

fit if you bought the one you really wanted. You also know that

if you try to bluff him by asking for the '85 rather than the

'86 he will produce the bottle from the folds of his morning

suite.





The airports of Western Europe, particularly Amsterdam and

Zurich for transit passengers are amazing. Good wine is not in

it. From behind glass, possibly bullet-proof, you can gaze at

bottles of 200 year old brandy. I wonder if anyone actually

drinks it, or do they frame it or something? You may wonder,

whilst looking for the rather cheaper duty-free shop which sells

things for under $1000, whether you could buy some of these

things rather less expensively somewhere else.





If you go to Italy or France you can just go to the local shop

in the town and you will be amazed at the range of wines there.

Of course the local wine/s will be paramount in the mind of the

storekeeper or wine merchant, but there will be some special

wines that really need attention paid to them. Little stores can

often come up with some really cracking wine if persuaded to.

"This is my last bottle" really means that the wine is really

good and possibly too good to be drunk by a foreigner.





If you take a tour of the wine growing regions of Italy or

France you will be able to buy a case or two of whichever wine

you took a fancy to on your holiday. Having tasted it in Italy

though, does not necessarily mean that it will taste the same in

England or Germany when it's only 2C outside.





Most of us would love to go to interesting places; see how wine

is made and taste it on the spot; have the time to wander round

wine warehouses and have the knowledge of what to look for. The

rest of us take advantage of the new ability of being able to
href=http://www.saloto.com>buy wine online. It's much easier

but not, perhaps, as much fun.





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About the author:



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df
WHITE WINE


Wine Making (Vinification).

The name 'Wine' derives from the recursive acronym "Wine Is Not an Emulator", although some have used the unofficial expansion "Windows Emulator". Wine is an Open Source implementation of the Windows API on top of X and Unix. More information can be read in the articles Why Wine is so important, and Debunking Wine Myths. The taste of a wine is a reflection of where its grapes were grown. Wine is an "alcoholic" beverage. White wine is always served chilled while red wine is always served warm. The surprising part about finding this flaw in Wine is that they implemented the entire Meta File API without realizing that this could be a security issue. Acidity: Describes a tart or sour taste in the mouth when total acidity of the wine is high. Red wine is OUT. If this wine is so good this young, I wonder how good it might be in 3-4 years.
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zinfeindel



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Wine Enthusiast Funnel with Removable Screen and Stand


Due to popular demand weâve put our Aerating Funnel on itâs own storage stand. Designed to hold your funnel at the ready and catch errant drips when youâre done. Stainless steel so thereâs no tainting or tarnishing. The removable screen filters sediment and cleans easily. 5'H x 3 1/2'D.
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