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Investing in wine:
Expensive not always better
By Jim
LaMar Bankrate.com
You've just come into a little extra cash and are
looking to diversify your portfolio. Recalling an article listing
fabulous wine auction prices, you decide to add some burgundy chips
to your blue chips. After all, not only does wine taste better with
age, it appreciates in value, right? Not always. Do some research
before you take a walk through the Boulevard Bottle Shop or you
may corkscrew your liquid assets in ways you never intended.
Fact is, only some wine increases
monetarily as it gets older and that has more to do with it becoming
more rare than with an actual improvement in taste. While there
are wines that get better with age, most simply just get older.
Most wines begin to deteriorate in flavor and value within two or
three years of purchase, especially without proper storage conditions.
The $4 bottle of champagne you
saved from your wedding to open on your son's first birthday
died while Junior was being conceived. Oh, it was a $140 bottle
of Dom Perignon? That's different -- it may have made it to his
first day of kindergarten celebration, but beyond that, you'd have
done better putting your money into a savings bond.
While supply and demand dictate
prices more than quality, the good news is that great-tasting wine
-- even the best -- is not that far from the average consumer's
economic grasp.
For example, my wine-tasting compadres
and I recently blind-tasted some examples of Cabernet Franc. Our
host slipped two bottles of Chateau Cheval Blanc into the mix. Recognized
by experts as one of the top French Bordeaux, they cost over $400
a bottle. Rather than blowing away the competition of California
wines, though, they blended in well and neither their ages nor pedigrees
were extremely obvious. In fact, although it was fairly tight, the
French wines actually settled into the bottom of the group rankings.
Only some wine increases in value
monetarily as it gets older -- and that has more to do with it becoming
more rare than with an actual improvement in taste.
Does this mean that Chateau Cheval
Blanc 1985 St. Emilion, at $460 a pop, instead of tasting 77 times
better than Pepperwood Grove 1998 California Cabernet Franc at $6,
doesn't actually taste ANY better?
Well, it's not that easy. It might
be that we wine tasters have "California palates," characterized
by preferences for wines that have more fruit, ripeness and youth
to their flavors. Or that in spite of the panel members' experience
with and dedication to wine tasting, we're not very good at it.
It's also just as likely that grape growing and winemaking techniques
have improved so much in the past 20 years that traditional French
benchmarks of quality no longer dominate.
What it probably means, though,
is that the flavor differences that exist between premium and not
so premium wines may be much more subtle to most people than the
price differences would suggest. Translation: Unless you're a bona
fide sommelier, tasting as good a wine as exists may quite likely
be fulfilled at the local wine shop and even within the confines
of the weekly grocery budget. These benchmark and counterpart wines
give reasonable flavor approximations for fractions of the originals'
prices.
Curious about the pinnacle of Pinot
Noir, but a little short of the $1,800 to $4,000 per bottle needed
to sample Domaine de la Romanee Conti 1995 Romanee Conti? Give the
Cambria 1997 Santa Maria "Julia's Vineyard" Pinot Noir
at about $18 to $27 a try. Or instead of shelling out $150 to $225
for a Joseph Drouhin Le Montrachet 1997 "Marquis de Laguiche"
Côte de Beaune Chardonnay, pour yourself a glass of the Cuvaison
1999 Napa Valley Chardonnay. You'll get more than 75 percentof the
taste for about 10 percentof the price.
In fact, many New World wines are
50 years ahead in vineyard practices and winemaking technique, but
lag 200 years behind in renown. The following bargains don't necessarily
have expensive or famous counterparts, but all are examples of very
affordable and delicious wines: Mason 1999 Napa Valley Sauvignon
Blanc ($11-$14), Laurel Glen 1998 California "Reds" ($7-$9)
and Lindemans 1998 Australian "Bin 45" Cabernet Sauvignon
($7-$10).
So, put some of these into your portfolio and you'll
realize a profit two ways -- both at the checkout counter and when
you share them with friends at dinner.
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