Old bottles of wine
 

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[Closed] Old bottles of wine

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wine valuations - any recommended sites / places to get some bottles valued?

I've been tidying in the garage and rediscovered 9 bottles of various stuff that were supposedly good wines and that have been set aside for the special occasion that has never come. I've done a bit of googling for the identifiable ones (eg: a St Emilion and a Chateauneuf du Pape) but locating up to date values for specific years is proving tough.

I barely drink now so they're probably wasted on me, but would like to identify if they are worth drinking at all, worth keeping, or worth selling. Any ideas?


 
Posted : 09/02/2020 8:59 pm
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Send them to me and I’ll check them and let you know if they’re any good?


 
Posted : 09/02/2020 9:01 pm
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Depending on the insulation on your garage and how they were stored they might all be ruined now by extreme temperatures I'm afraid.


 
Posted : 09/02/2020 9:07 pm
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+1 for juanking's comment; guaranteed ways to kill wine - variable temperature, vibration, sunlight.
Provenance and how they were stored would be key considerations for an auctioneer so probably little interest and low value.
A practical solution would be to use them in cooking - particularly for reds - but taste first; if they're not good enough to drink, they're not good enough to cook with.


 
Posted : 09/02/2020 9:12 pm
 ctk
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Stick them on ebay and let the market decide.


 
Posted : 09/02/2020 9:18 pm
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Posted : 09/02/2020 9:26 pm
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A lot of auctioneers and buyers at auction won't touch stuff that hasn't got any proof of correct storage. I'd drink it all yourself. You might find some of the bottles are ok.


 
Posted : 09/02/2020 10:14 pm
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The Vivino app might give you an idea, but as said before, how it’s being stored will be a factor.


 
Posted : 09/02/2020 10:19 pm
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Raffle them off and give anything above the postage to mountain rescue?


 
Posted : 09/02/2020 11:03 pm
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And the lucky winner gets a 'prize' which is undrinkable?


 
Posted : 09/02/2020 11:04 pm
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If they were lying on their sides it's likely they're ok. Standing up, vinegar.


 
Posted : 09/02/2020 11:11 pm
 wool
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Knacker job I would suspect, Open and try you might be lucky.


 
Posted : 09/02/2020 11:32 pm
 feed
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I’ve been tidying in the garage and rediscovered 9 bottles of various stuff that were supposedly good wines

You must have either the largest, or most disorganised garage ever
A bottle of wine wouldn't get to survive\hide for long in my shed, never mind nine of them.

been set aside for the special occasion that has never come.

Hang on, is this a cry for help, we're here for you bro 🙂


 
Posted : 09/02/2020 11:51 pm
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Storing horizontally keeps cork moist but, in isolation, does nothing for contents of bottle.


 
Posted : 09/02/2020 11:52 pm
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have been set aside for the special occasion that has never come

Hang in there, if you wait long enough, the MIL will eventually die.


 
Posted : 10/02/2020 1:56 am
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Similarly to OP, recently decided it was time for the 3 old bottles in the bottom of the cupboard to go as the hoarding tendency had been stronger than all the occasions! So far the first an '81 Bordeaux was ok, the second a Spanish one was undrinkable, the final is a chateauneuf du pape that still needs opening.
I don't think they've really been worth the cupboard space or various moves, but have been a long standing feature of the wine rack!


 
Posted : 10/02/2020 5:42 am

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