White wine does not have a long shelf life, Enjoy it now.... And Congratulations....
2007-07-28 07:03:23
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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If you keep it in the right conditions, it can be kept years.
My grandfather died two years ago and left my family his house in Ireland. We live there, or maybe I should say here, whatever, now.
Anyway, he left me his wine collection (How mad is he, trusting a fifteen year old with a wine collection?), its down in the cellar, and in his will, it said that the collection has been in our family since wine was first invented! (I suppose that means I'm descended from the inventors of wine!) Ten bottles down in the cellar are about 6000 years old, according to the dates on the labels, anyway.
The point is, keep the bottle in cool conditions, if you have a cellar, that's great, for a few years. I suggest you do what I do.
I keep a wine journal. I have a taste of the wine when I first get it and write the taste in the journal, then I put it into my part of the cellar, I leave it for a little while, and taste it again and write down the taste to compare different lengths of time with the tastes of different wines. If you do this, you can compare the taste of this anniversary with the tenth!
2007-07-29 04:16:20
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answer #2
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answered by AG Bellamy 5
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Depending on the type of white wine and the vintage it may well hold up until your 10th. "White wine is the next least aged wine. But here there is a range from a light wine like Sauvignon Blanc or a light Chardonnay, to more ageable "complex" Chardonnay of good White Burgundies. Probably drink the former within a few years (aging isn't needed, and the latter from 3 to 7 years). Dessert wines like Sauternes or other late harvest wines (Riesling, Gewurztraminer, etc.) should be aged. Sauternes get better over a very long time: 10, 20, 30, 40 or more years!"
2007-07-28 07:10:25
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Trust me, the answerers who told you to drink the wine in a short period of time are absolutely right. White wine, particularly contemporary white wines tend to deteriorate and become vinegary over time. I learned this 15 years ago from a somelier--he opened a 5 year old bottle of chardonnay and told me to drink it and it was terrible. After that, I tried my wines at home aged 5+ years and they were awful and had lost all of their original positive characteristics. This was before I had a more advanced pallette. Even to the novice wine drinker, white wines aged 5+ years tend to taste terribly. If you'd like to drink your wine in conjunction with an event, drink it on your next anniversary. Make a great meal to complement your wine, and have a great evening.
2007-07-28 12:36:14
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answer #4
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answered by falsumnomen 3
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Drink it now and save up for another bottle for the tenth anniversary
The wine needs to be a particular vintage and stored in proper conditions to keep and age .
It should still be ok in 5 years time , but enjoy it now .
2007-07-28 08:51:10
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Keep in in a cool dry place with the bottle turned on its side. This keeps the cork wet and will not allow air into the bottle (if your cork dries, it will turn into vinaeger and will be worthless). If stored properly, you should be able to drink this wine in 5 years without any concerns. If it gets moved around alot, it will bruise and go bad. In five years, you can open it, pour a couple of glasses and let her take the first drink....I'm just kidding. It should be just fine...Unless, it has a plastic cork or a screw on cap.
2007-07-28 07:33:08
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answer #6
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answered by BudLt 5
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Depends on whether it is a really premium wine that is made to be kept or not.
Most of today's wines are made to drink now (including most reds). as many others have said, white wine, in general, is NOT meant to be kept and will deteriorate with age.
Make a good meal around it, drink it and enjoy (not TOO cold or the taste will go).
2007-07-28 07:18:40
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answer #7
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answered by Pema 2
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I would just drink it now, red wine often benefits from ageing, but as far as I know white wine doesn't really need to be stored and is best drunk while young. Keep it in a cool place, not the fridge, until you are ready to drink it then cool it by leaving it in the fridge for a few hours or put it in water and ice to cool it quicker. Enjoy!
2007-07-28 07:06:24
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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approximately ninety% of the wine you purchase on the interior of sight marketplace or liquor shop are anticipated to be opened and under the effect of alcohol interior of days of the acquisition. Wine should not be offered for the reason of having outdated till you have a suitable wine cellar with the two temperature advert humidity administration. the ten% of wines that could desire to be saved for long sessions of time are going to be wines that are bottled with the purpose of having outdated. they are going to be wines with intense Tannin content fabric, and that they'll frequently age for 5-6 years,with an outdoors age of ten years outdated.actual collectible wines will proceed to age (advance in style, physique, mouth experience, and fruitiness) for some years whilst saved under appropriate wine getting outdated situations,i.e. a wine cellar. Wine could continually be saved on it is ingredient or in a marginally downward place with the cork pointing downward. This retains your cork moist,and optimistically it has continually been saved that way previous to once you obtain it. of direction,maximum liquor shops, and massive container shops have all of their bottles status at as quickly as up, and the buyer has no way of understanding how long it is been status there on a shelf. in case you would be asking how long is a bottle of wine sturdy for considering which you in basic terms got here across a bottle on a shelf someplace on your place, it may be smart to anticipate if it is been 7 or 8 years simply by fact the classic date on the label, that your wine is probable no longer at it is height of wine eating perfection. it would be drinkable, or it may desire to be vinegar flavored, you will in no way understand till you pop the cork. via the way, those pretend wine corks do a good interest of shielding oxygen out of your saved wine. So open the bottle, scent the cork, scent the wine, and in case you do no longer scent vinegar or mildew,or something different than a wine scent, then pour a small volume right into a tumbler, swirl, sniff and flavor. Is it wine? Then bottoms up.
2016-10-13 00:20:04
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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white wines don't get better with age.
you're probably ok for a couple of years, but five is pushing it.
you could always keep opening it and adding some preservative, i think citric acid will do, and then re corking if you really want to keep it that long.
you'd be better off just buying a really good bottle in five years time though.
2007-07-30 02:28:43
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answer #10
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answered by jabberwocky 3
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well, white wine usually does not improve with age unless it is proper;y stored. if you are just planning to keep it in your regular fridge, then that's a bad idea. opening and closing the cooling source on a daily basis will affect the wine.
2007-07-28 07:06:26
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answer #11
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answered by feeshbulb 2
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