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Seem to think that it is over 30 years old. the old lady that owns it thinks it maybe worth a few bob.

2007-05-13 07:20:52 · 5 answers · asked by Suzie M 1 in Society & Culture Royalty

5 answers

If it is a vintage wine - a wine of a particular year - it will have the year on the bottle. If it is non-vintage, it is a blend of various wines and was intended for drinking when bought - as most champagne is. A royal warrant just means that the Queen buys that brand. Any company that supplies the queen officially is entitled to note the "By Appointment" on the item. You will even find toilet paper and pot scourers "by appointment". It doesn't necessarily add any value to the item.

Without a year on the bottle, it will have no increased value from what you can buy now. As it is probably undrinkable, it would have less value than a fresh bottle.

2007-05-14 12:23:40 · answer #1 · answered by tentofield 7 · 0 1

If you look on the label it will probably say the year that it was bottled! The Royal warrant, merely means that at some time, Moet & Chandon champagne has been purchased by Buckingham Palace. Champagne does not improve with age, it is meant to be consumed fairly quickly, so if it is 30 years old, I wouldn`t like to drink it.

2007-05-13 13:13:31 · answer #2 · answered by Social Science Lady 7 · 0 0

If it's that old, the wine would probably be bad as Champagne's a white wine and that has a life of about nine years. It might be worth something as a collector's item. Put it on Ebay and see how much it gets.

2007-05-13 07:58:23 · answer #3 · answered by rann_georgia 7 · 2 0

Good luck with that. The most answers I have gotten on a question has been 70 answers.

2016-05-17 07:54:10 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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2007-05-13 08:00:06 · answer #5 · answered by Skidmarks 3 · 0 4

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