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We have two bottles that we are interested in pricing:

(1) 1983 Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon - Lake Spring
(2) 1995 N. V. Chardonnay Raymond Reserve

2007-01-12 08:25:07 · 3 answers · asked by mizfreud 1 in Food & Drink Beer, Wine & Spirits

3 answers

Winecommune.com is the most established wine auction site, and the best source for current market value of vintage wines. Unfortunately, many wines come to market too infrequently to establish a reliable trend. the only way to know for these less commonly auctioned wines is to put them out to auction, and the market will show itself.

2007-01-12 08:45:07 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Just because a wine is older, doesn't make it valuable. Also, if you haven't kept the wine constantly in a controlled temperature environment, away from light, and set on it's side being rotated every so often, you probably have a very good bottle of vinegar or wine that's starting to go off.

My sister has several bottles from the early 80's that she kept on a wine rack in her living room and none of them are even drinkable now, much less valuable.

Barring that, you could just go to a reputable wine seller and ask if the bottles you have are valuable. Another good resource is Wine Enthusiast magazine.

2007-01-12 09:12:02 · answer #2 · answered by Chanteuse_ar 7 · 0 0

Assuming that these wines were properly stored from release (50 degrees F, 70% humidity), a collector might pay as much as $100 for the Lakespring. The market for old Lakespring is very, very limited. Drink the Raymond.

2007-01-12 11:26:36 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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