DRINKING a 159 YEAR old WINE - POISON or PERFECTION?!

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  • Опубликовано: 14 май 2022
  • Tasting a 159-year-old wine. Poison or Perfection tasting with Master of Wine.
    Support me on my new PATREON: / konstantinbaum
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    Check out my website:
    meinelese.de
    I have used this glass in this Video: RIEDEL Veritas Champagne
    I have tasted the following wine in this Video:
    1863 J. W. Burmester & Co. Reserva Novidade de 1863 Engarrafado em 1932 - Reengarrafado em 1942
    2011 Burmester Colheita
    The 100 Point Scoring System (from www.robertparker.com):
    96-100: An extraordinary wine of profound and complex character displaying all the attributes expected of a classic wine of its variety. Wines of this caliber are worth a special effort to find, purchase and consume.
    90 - 95: An outstanding wine of exceptional complexity and character. In short, these are terrific wines.
    80 - 89: A barely above average to very good wine displaying various degrees of finesse and flavor as well as character with no noticeable flaws.
    70 - 79: An average wine with little distinction except that it is a soundly made. In essence, a straightforward, innocuous wine.
    60 - 69: A below-average wine containing noticeable deficiencies, such as excessive acidity and/or tannin, an absence of flavor or possibly dirty aromas or flavors.
    50 - 59: A wine deemed to be unacceptable.
    Burmester does not have any records of the wines reaching this far back but from what my contacts said this is a wine from the 1863 vintage that was aged in large barrels and then was bottled into large glass balloons - so-called Demi Johns in 1932. After 10 years it was then bottled into this bottle.
    Think about what the wine must have seen over the years. In 1863 Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation to free slaves in US confederate states, it was also the year the Football Association formed in England and the year the International Committee of the Red Cross was established and the year Rockefeller started the oil business that would make him the richest man in the world.
    On top of that, It was also an extraordinary vintage for Port. Most vintage charts do no go back as far as 1863 but I found a couple of older tasting notes rating this wine 100 Points and Taylors’s - another famous Port house - made a special bottling of their 1863 and sold it for several thousand dollars a bottle.
    Taylors are saying that: “The harvest of 1863 was one of the finest of the nineteenth century and the last great Port vintage before Phylloxera spread throughout the Douro Valley.” Yes, that is another interesting part of the story because Phylloxera the insect that destroyed most vineyards in Europe in the late 19th century / early 20th century was first discovered in 1863 in the south of France.
    After seeing their vineyards going down the drain winemakers realized that they could combat Phylloxera by grafting their vines onto American rootstocks, that are resistant to this louse. However almost all vineyards in Europe have since then not been planted on their own rootstock and there are some that say that the old - not grafted vines produced better wines
    As this is from a vintage before the vines had to be ripped out in the Portugal as well this wine is actually 100% from Vitis Vinifera vines - and from one of the best vintages on top of that. Vintage is a very important factor when it comes to the age worthiness of wines. If you want a wine to age for centuries you have to make sure that it is from a very good producer, from a great vintage, and ideally, a sweet wine as they tend to keep longer.
    This wine ticks all the boxes and on top of it, it is comparable to a Colheita Port from today. Colheitas by law are Tawny Ports made with grapes from a single vintage. They should be matured in wooden casks for at least seven years but remember: The 1863 was aged in barrels for 69 years!

Комментарии • 4,8 тыс.

  • @KonstantinBaumMasterofWine
    @KonstantinBaumMasterofWine  Год назад +2227

    Replies to the most frequently asked questions:
    Yes, I shared the wine with friends and family and did not drink the bottle alone in the cellar while filming this video ... (ask the @wineking :) )
    I did not decant it because I wanted to see how it reacts to oxygen and I am still tasting it two weeks later.
    Port Wine is wine. The clue is in the name.
    The price of the bottle is unclear. It depends on how much sb would have been prepared to pay for it. I would not have sold it - the experience was more valuable than money for me personally.
    The bottle likely came from a family member. At the time (years ago) neither the person nor I knew what the value of the bottle was and I am of course very grateful for that gift.
    I own Ah-Sos and a Durant but I don't think they would have helped in this case.
    Ah and: I did not die.
    Thanks for watching, subscribing, and liking!

    • @Mercmad
      @Mercmad Год назад +53

      A few of my ancestors left their home in Nassau ,Prussia in 1843 to migrate to New Zealand where they had paid for land in the Nelson Area. Their intention was to start a wine business .When they arrived in NZ they discovered they had been duped ,so a year later they went to Tasmania .They nearly starved there and were helped to reach the Australian main land with kind assistance of the Tasmanian German community. They made their way north,reaching paramatta in New South wales. There,My GGG grandfather met a man who was also seeking to start a wine business and together they set up a vinyard in the Hunter valley where the other man owned land. As my ancestor was not only a cooper but also a vine dresser he was able to plant vines which were still producing in the 1970's when they were dug up. The man who owned the land was George Wyndham.It's not only the wine but the vines themselves which can have a long life.

    • @oldi184
      @oldi184 Год назад +49

      "Makes me wonder what we actually did for the last 150 years."
      Well...we invented plastics and Monsanto.

    • @kirdot2011
      @kirdot2011 Год назад +4

      I'm pretty sure it tastes like brandy as well

    • @Nicinoo-lm7pl
      @Nicinoo-lm7pl Год назад +1

      Well played meastro I could almost taste that stuff. ❤

    • @ambermay7032
      @ambermay7032 Год назад +3

      ​@@Mercmad My grandfather came to Australia from England in the 1850's. He eventually settled in Orchard Hills, Penrith area where he started and owned a vineyard. He died in 1915 just after getting word of his youngest son's death in the WW1 trenches. his farm was sold and everything was ripped up. Our relatives may have known of each other as the wine business has always been one of those close industries. I also grew up in the hunter valley and even lived in Branxton for a while and would tour the vineyards and historical areas regularly. I think I missed visiting Dalwood House but I do have a few Wyndham Estate bottles of wine sitting in the cupboard.

  • @mouthwash8182
    @mouthwash8182 Год назад +11897

    I think the oldest wine I’ve ever tasted was a box wine (moscato) from Safeway. Aged for about 1 month (the time it takes to go the vineyard to Safeway). It had really absorbed some nice notes from the plastic bag. The buzz was the same in the end, so a win I guess?

    • @nnslg
      @nnslg Год назад +133

      Nothing better than cheap pinot grigio boxed wine :)

    • @pepethepatriot7524
      @pepethepatriot7524 Год назад +227

      The poors are at it again!

    • @guitarsandexplodingdinosau7821
      @guitarsandexplodingdinosau7821 Год назад +199

      Careful not to anger the wine snobs😂 im a poor boy from NC, and im proud to say that I am one of the few to have a jar of popcorn sutton's cherry bounce moonshine. It is magnifique! It has notes of cherry, oak, and goddamn moonshine.

    • @spongebobsucks12
      @spongebobsucks12 Год назад +16

      Yeah you know whose Blue Collar based on what youre drinking for. Taste or the ABV lmao

    • @nnslg
      @nnslg Год назад +44

      Yeah you know who's snooty when the cheap stuff tastes like grape juice with a kick, amazing compared to "real" wine. The luckiest position is being able to afford anything but liking the cheap stuff way more...

  • @thecathode
    @thecathode Год назад +2367

    Opening a bottle of this age is a true historical moment, the people who made this wine wouldn't have imagined in their wildest dreams that this moment would be shared with millions of "internauts" 🥳

    • @jonaspeterson5040
      @jonaspeterson5040 Год назад +1

      So true. In 1863 the fastest way to get around the planet was by steamship and telephones were a full generation off...oil lanterns, horses and terrible herbal remedies! Their minds would be blown...to be truthful my grandpa would also be blown away by our current ways

    • @bananachan1106
      @bananachan1106 Год назад +3

      true

    • @johnholzhey8149
      @johnholzhey8149 Год назад +3

      It's like the 1976 Christian Brothers Cab I had the joy to taste.It was what a great Cab should be with dark fruit, and forest floor/mushroom notes thrown in. Superb.

    • @crossandres7
      @crossandres7 Год назад +1

      This is so true...

    • @LivingVanlife
      @LivingVanlife Год назад +6

      So true this is historical and even better that it’s on video for everyone to witness. He opened an interactive time capsule that gave its explorer sensory over load. What could be cooler than that? Just wow

  • @kendo2377
    @kendo2377 Год назад +219

    The oldest wine I ever drank was a 1964 Château Nénin merlot. My grandfather gave it to my father on the day I was born. He kept until my 18th birthday. We had the father-son 'man talk' about being an adult and then we each had a glass. I remember not liking it. After my father died we were going through his things and he had the empty bottle in his WW2 memento box, along with other things that were milestones in his life. I still have that bottle.

    • @Natalie-hg3gh
      @Natalie-hg3gh 8 месяцев назад +2

      🥲

    • @SilverSpoon_
      @SilverSpoon_ 6 месяцев назад

      i still have a givry 1er cru 1969 wine in my cave, idk i should try it one day.

    • @yammmit
      @yammmit 6 месяцев назад +1

      what is the “man-talk”😂

    • @SilverSpoon_
      @SilverSpoon_ 6 месяцев назад +4

      @@yammmit you wouldn't get it.

    • @mxrrow.
      @mxrrow. 6 месяцев назад

      wow.. father-son talk... I wish I had that too

  • @maineaglexproductions4025
    @maineaglexproductions4025 Год назад +52

    The oldest wine I've drunk came out of my grandfathers personal collection: it was a 1926 bottle of something French and Red, I was far too young (16) to remember what. The bottle itself wasn't special, but the story behind it: this particular bottle had changed hands a couple of times. My great-grandfather purchased it while stationed in Germany in 1945, from whom did he purchase it? A 101st Airbourne Division paratrooper. Where had the airman come across the bottle? He had liberated it from an SS wine cellar in Berchtesgaden. One can only assume it got there from Paris.
    I still remember the git in my grandfathers face on my 16th birthday when he said "I've got something to show you". He poured me a glass, and after assuring me I was old enough and allowed, he launched into the story after the first sip hit my lips, all the way from great-grandad's basic to him being scolded as a boy for going near his dad's "special wine". My great grandpa never had any intent of opening or drinking it, feeling it should be preserved, but grandpa said letting it spoil would be an act of disgusting disrespect, so he saved it for my first drink after great grandad passed.
    I know that was a lot more detail than anyone asked for, but I'll never get over how cool it was. An already decently aged bottle gets swiped from Paris by the nazis and brought all the way up to the Eagle's nest, goes the entire war without being opened, is liberated by a US paratrooper, sold to an infantry grunt, survives 65+ years and multiple moves in the care of said infantry grunt, gets passed on as an heirloom, and finally gets opened to celebrate the 16th of some scraggly kid in a My Chem shirt..

    • @braceT77
      @braceT77 4 месяца назад +3

      Very cool story glad it got saved here

    • @agneyajoshi8012
      @agneyajoshi8012 3 месяца назад +3

      That’s an amazing story, and i’m definitely jealous, as a 16 year old also currently in a my chem phase

    • @maineaglexproductions4025
      @maineaglexproductions4025 3 месяца назад +1

      @@agneyajoshi8012 Keep music in your life, man. It will be there when nothing else is.

    • @turdferguson2982
      @turdferguson2982 3 месяца назад

      Good story but I threw up in my mouth at My Chem shirt. Fucking emos.

    • @leomarkaable1
      @leomarkaable1 2 дня назад

      My uncle Norman Nitzkowski was in the 101st, parachuted in at Normandy. My mom and dad used to pray for him. He was sent to Berchtesg aden at the end of the war. He got a 12 by 5 tapestry of Nazi design when he was there. I saw it when I visited at 12 y.o. so bright red white and black. Scared me. Norman was a brave and smart man. A grateful nation made him a county judge.

  • @andreanorsa2530
    @andreanorsa2530 Год назад +4212

    When you drink such old wines you should forget tasting rules and just enjoy the moment. You are drinking not just wine, but history. The oldest wine I tasted (fortified spanish wine) was from 1838 and I had the chance to taste together with the best sommelier of the world of 2013. I will never forget this experience.

  • @conservativemike3768
    @conservativemike3768 Год назад +2834

    I once swilled some Port made by an old farmer named Bill, who scratched out a few acres of rocky soil near Brisbane, Australia. He aged it a few months in old Sparklett’s water bottles. Stuff nearly killed me: 5 points out of 100. RIP, Bill.

    • @dambawwe
      @dambawwe Год назад +6

      =)))))

    • @TheMrTape
      @TheMrTape Год назад +106

      @@dambawwe Did bill pass from the wine or no?

    • @FlipsideJapan
      @FlipsideJapan Год назад +9

      Where abouts near brissy?

    • @justoldjoe9328
      @justoldjoe9328 Год назад +410

      Many years ago when my grandmother was alive she used to give us home made teas when we didn't feel good. If we really felt bad she would give us a glass of home made wine. It was terrible but always made us feel better. It wasn't until I was older that I learned about her poppy garden. Turns out Grandma's secret tea and wine recipes were home grown heroin drinks. I miss that wine, and Grandma.

    • @monko4738
      @monko4738 Год назад +223

      @@justoldjoe9328 Grammy's good ol heroin farm.

  • @flamey750
    @flamey750 Год назад +56

    i once drank 4,6 billion year old water

    • @allkindofstupidstuff
      @allkindofstupidstuff 2 месяца назад

      Not true.
      Tell me where you got the water from and I'll tell you why

    • @kevinr7775
      @kevinr7775 Месяц назад

      He got it from the sewers

  • @luislourenco2915
    @luislourenco2915 4 месяца назад +10

    I’m Portuguese and couldn’t be more proud of my country right now ❤

  • @prescriptionjuul3583
    @prescriptionjuul3583 Год назад +2152

    Oldest wine I’ve had was also a port, a mid 1950s bottle my brother and I found in our grandparents cabin as teenagers. Never have I tasted anything so foul

    • @lowkeyquintin4202
      @lowkeyquintin4202 Год назад +41

      Damn lol wonder why it tasted so bad?

    • @xStaman
      @xStaman Год назад +260

      @@lowkeyquintin4202 Its all about the temp and humidity

    • @lowkeyquintin4202
      @lowkeyquintin4202 Год назад +20

      @@xStaman I’ve tasted some really bad wines that I guess weren’t steeped correctly

    • @whitelandsdowne3974
      @whitelandsdowne3974 Год назад +1

      I knocked a wall down in my basement in the 70s and found a bottle of medicine from 1921, the kicker is, it was morphine sulphate dissolved in Port wine. Now, some unidentified cheap port from 1920 in a bottle left behind a wall in a damp cellar should be vile. I opened it, thinking to smell it, and it smelled so wonderful I had to taste it. I very carefully tasted it over a few weeks, it was amazing stuff. Had a real kick so you could only swish a bit around your mouth more or less, but it tasted incredible. Very smoky, sweet,Iike smoked almonds and raisins and cinnamon and a hint of wormwood, maybe that's the medicines.. .

    • @eggsaladsandwhiches
      @eggsaladsandwhiches Год назад +369

      Plot twist, it was actually granddads spitter he resealed just to be a bastard.

  • @x4tfxChallenger
    @x4tfxChallenger Год назад +1721

    There are wines in Italy that are over 200 years old and they are still good to drink. As long as the cork has not been compromised and stored in a wine cellar (or some place to help prevent bacteria or contamination from penetrating through the cork), they are said to be some of the best wines to drink in the world.

    • @cristinacosta7221
      @cristinacosta7221 Год назад +38

      But italy wines suck, portuguese ones are the best

    • @scoopstacey3112
      @scoopstacey3112 Год назад +6

      @@cristinacosta7221 opinions are like assholes buddy. We all have one.

    • @x4tfxChallenger
      @x4tfxChallenger Год назад +151

      @@cristinacosta7221 Lol. Everyone has their preference. I haven’t heard of Portugal having good wines. Gonna have to give it a try.

    • @andrewreil3938
      @andrewreil3938 Год назад +53

      French wines are the best dont even act like it isnt.

    • @Peter7966
      @Peter7966 Год назад +29

      I think Tibetan box wines are the best... only kidding.

  • @guitar911rock
    @guitar911rock Год назад +69

    I've tasted the 1863 taylor, just a few ounces. we drank it over hours. This old of wine completely comes to life after hours of air, it's truly an incredible experience. One of the collectors we were with says he comes back day or two or a couple after opening such old ports and they taste completely different.

    • @nhojcam
      @nhojcam 6 месяцев назад +2

      i call BS. sorry, but i just don't believe you.

    • @Partimepeasant
      @Partimepeasant 6 месяцев назад

      I was not present at that time.@@nhojcam

    • @Alsry1
      @Alsry1 6 месяцев назад +4

      ​@@nhojcamopen any bottle of wine and taste it over 2 days. Any wine will taste different. The question is will it be different in a bad way or a good way

  • @_symmetry_
    @_symmetry_ Год назад +3

    Some wines really can touch the heart. This one definitely falls at the very top of this category, it must have been very hard to remained composed as much as you managed to Konstantin. Fantastic video in every way.

  • @ottovalkamo1
    @ottovalkamo1 Год назад +316

    When this wine was being harvested:
    - Germany/Central Europe was still an un-unified mess of small feudal-ish kingdoms like Bayern, Württemberg, Prussia/North German confederation
    - Victor Emmanuel II's Italy had just unified two years prior
    - Queen Victoria was 36 years into her 64-year old reign as Queen/Monarch
    - The U.S.A. was in the midst of a Civil War as the Battle of Gettysburg raged in July 1863
    - Finland got its first railway from Hämeenlinna to Helsinki, its own currency, the Markka.
    - The Russian occupied part of Poland had another large rebellion, the January Uprising against the Tsar
    - The French had a monarch, Louis Napoleon Bonaparte III who modernised Paris with the new city plan.

    • @KonstantinBaumMasterofWine
      @KonstantinBaumMasterofWine  Год назад +38

      That's just crazy!

    • @james_tiberius_kirk73
      @james_tiberius_kirk73 Год назад +12

      Australia was in the midst of a huge Gold Rush which is largely responsible for buildings that still stand today in our Capital Cities.

    • @TimsWildlife
      @TimsWildlife Год назад +4

      And slavery in the USA had just been abolished.

    • @magnusmugnas9493
      @magnusmugnas9493 Год назад +8

      It really makes you wonder what the historical bullet points for our current generation are. When someone hundreds of years in the future looks back at the 2020's, what will they think of?

    • @ceoofbased3956
      @ceoofbased3956 Год назад +8

      @@magnusmugnas9493 Crippling depression and sadness.

  • @foobar-9k
    @foobar-9k Год назад +789

    Being a poor fellow from Argentina, somehow I had the incredible luck of opening not one, but two "Reservado" from the Rodas winery, from the year 1973. One I opened in 2010. I actually cried that day, and I get emotional just remembering all of it. Best wine I'll ever have. It had lost all but the faintest of its red color. But the brown that replaced it was just so clear, so beautiful! So incredible in taste and smell! A marvelous experience that I was able to share with people that appreciated the experience. No regrets on drinking a wine bottle that, in monetary value, actually competed with my life savings at the time.
    The second bottle I opened two years later. It was barely drinkable, such a disappointment :-(

    • @themagicalgamer6522
      @themagicalgamer6522 11 месяцев назад +7

      le vendieron caca paisano

    • @foobar-9k
      @foobar-9k 11 месяцев назад +4

      No a mi, esas botellas estuvieron guardadas en casa por años, y habían sido recibidas como regalo. Simplemente habría que haberlas tomado antes 😀

    • @rickwilliams967
      @rickwilliams967 4 месяца назад

      It's just wine dude. Chill. There's a lot of bottles left from the 70s. Nothing special. Just drink it.

    • @AleHand_
      @AleHand_ 3 месяца назад +1

      ​@@rickwilliams967meh you don't make much success at parties, do you?

  • @blauro
    @blauro Год назад +3

    This is. Absolutely. Incredible. In the same way I value videos of abandoned locations around the world, I look at this to be an incredible adventure. A wine that has stood through decades is just mind blowing. Thank you SO much for this video.

  • @marcov.3228
    @marcov.3228 Год назад +3

    Ich habe nicht viele Videos von dir gesehen, doch jenes was ich sah ist, ein Mensch der "sein" Genussmittel verantwortungsvoll und ehrfürchtig genießt und dieses Erlebnis erfolgreich mit der communtity teilt.
    Danke dafür!
    Sehr spannend.

  • @ross3946
    @ross3946 Год назад +1419

    The most beautiful aspect to this video is seeing someone who has already achieved mastery being surprised and delighted by discovery. It shows how far reaching wine study can be and that it really is a journey without end.

    • @brinvargas1474
      @brinvargas1474 Год назад +7

      Ross, that is so perfectly said! 🥂

    • @cristobalcardona5592
      @cristobalcardona5592 Год назад +2

      There are about 2 million wines and new ones everyday!

    • @beansnwheels
      @beansnwheels Год назад +2

      Exactly why this is such a great hobby. I am 15 years in and can learn and discover until my last day on earth. It’s so lovely to wonder with the aromas and taste (and share). Thank you for your thoughts. It made me smile ;)

    • @cristobalcardona5592
      @cristobalcardona5592 Год назад +1

      @@beansnwheels You are welcome! Wine is a lifestyle that brings so much depth into someone's life! The people you meet along the journey are usually wonderful and unique! Pkease know that in MISSOURI was the first AVA, The Katy Wine Trail, not all happened in Napa!

    • @JacksonMack3742
      @JacksonMack3742 Год назад +3

      Its like the saying "the more you know, the more you realize you dont." Reminds me of an old masterful Biologist looking in wonder and amazement at a species of leaf he has seen thousands of times but revelling in the complete and utter unique beauty of that particular leaf.

  • @dscott2542
    @dscott2542 Год назад

    What an amazing video!! Thank you so much for sharing this with us, that is such a special opportunity. The oldest wine I have tasted was a 20 year old Shiraz from 2002, I was absolutely floored at how amazing the wine tasted. I wish I could still find one and taste it again, and share it with my closest friends.

  • @selfless727
    @selfless727 6 месяцев назад +6

    As I sit here sipping my vintage 2022. Ahhh us men of luxury.

  • @keizersneesar7352
    @keizersneesar7352 Год назад +191

    Me and my wine buddy had a rioja from 1928, which was surprisingly decent still! We still have one bottle unopened, to be served when it is exactly 100 years of age in 2028. You are hereby invited to join in on the experience!

    • @inyobill
      @inyobill Год назад +12

      Well now, that's a neighborly invitation, if |I have ever heard one.

    • @animestream1013
      @animestream1013 Год назад +6

      Wow nice occasion to celebrate such a great neighbor

    • @Kwacklet
      @Kwacklet Год назад +2

      Remind me after 6 years and make a video about it :)

    • @shujaa_skuruh3517
      @shujaa_skuruh3517 Год назад +1

      Remind me also and send the location whichever country you are at.

    • @inyobill
      @inyobill Год назад

      When the time comes I wish you in advance a hearty "Zum Wohl!", friend!.

  • @itrytoexplainphysicsasahig4224
    @itrytoexplainphysicsasahig4224 Год назад +13

    8:30 when he tastes it

  • @TrekkingDesi
    @TrekkingDesi 10 месяцев назад +9

    This is a historic moment ❤ you should've gathered all the wine expert you know and shared the wine together to make it even more historic event

  • @xyeB
    @xyeB Год назад +2

    Taking my bad words back,glad this guy tasted it and shared with his friends and family and made a video on it

  • @steveoliphant8541
    @steveoliphant8541 Год назад +230

    Around 30 years ago, I had the opportunity to taste an 1863 port. Not sure which port house. A friend of mine was a wine merchant and he opened it to share with a group of us. The nose was unbelievable, very strong, very round, fantastic. It was the best thing I’ve ever tasted. I only got one or two tiny sips. I still remember the moment 30 years later. I’d dearly love to experience it again.

    • @dublessings
      @dublessings Год назад +12

      Its all in your head

    • @iwantlee9510
      @iwantlee9510 Год назад +1

      @@dublessings yep

    • @JotaV2502
      @JotaV2502 11 месяцев назад +2

      ​​​​@@dublessings But it makes sense because you are literally drinking history. Even if it tastes bad you gotta enjoy the moment like if it was the supreme wine, history running through your mouth and blood

    • @clydegabion2386
      @clydegabion2386 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@JotaV2502 so you mean i should ignore the taste of soil outside and just enjoy the history with it?

    • @shirowolff9147
      @shirowolff9147 10 месяцев назад +4

      @@clydegabion2386 pretty much, l eat grass all the time

  • @christianeifel-guy9279
    @christianeifel-guy9279 Год назад +406

    It doesn't really matter how good your English is as a German... a genuine "Boah!" will always give it away 😁

    • @Watchcollecterzzz
      @Watchcollecterzzz Год назад

      This is why you lost both WW1 and WW2 because Germans are arrogant, BOAH!

    • @nickpatterson2479
      @nickpatterson2479 Год назад

      Yah!

    • @reaz1772
      @reaz1772 Год назад +4

      no totally german - boah alterrrrr!

    • @provuksmc6619
      @provuksmc6619 Год назад +2

      Or... the thicc german accent?

    • @sabine2442
      @sabine2442 Год назад

      Das er Deutsch ist merkt man sofort

  • @91mustang347
    @91mustang347 Год назад +2

    159 years this bottle was waiting for you to come and try :) Made me feel nostalgic to think of that. Cheers to such an experience and cheers to you!

  • @kaylacarpenter272
    @kaylacarpenter272 4 месяца назад +2

    Wow. You are so precious. Your passion is amazing. I also cry easily over seemingly simple things. You appreciate the fine details of life. What a beautiful guy.

  • @gamerkrill9497
    @gamerkrill9497 Год назад +245

    Ah man, this guy is so wholesome. It seems like he just loves sharing his passion with others; we need more people like Konstantin Baum.

  • @TheRandomPolishGuy
    @TheRandomPolishGuy Год назад +131

    This guy's smile when taking his nose to the glass just says everything without words. What a pleasure.

  • @jazzman2516
    @jazzman2516 Год назад +1

    I’m a young man right at the start of my wine journey and watching this video was super educational and inspiring. I hope to one day have an ounce of your wine knowledge, sir (and to one day try such a perfect wine, of course).

  • @danbuchner28
    @danbuchner28 Год назад

    Thank you for sharing this unique piece of history with us!

  • @lorenjones2733
    @lorenjones2733 Год назад +432

    I drink red dry boxed wine with ice in my glass like a hillbilly, but I appreciate the art of any booze. This was fun to watch. Great video!

    • @Vicariousleighilive..
      @Vicariousleighilive.. Год назад +2

      😂

    • @Space.Ghost.
      @Space.Ghost. Год назад +24

      A true hillbilly would drink it in a mason jar.

    • @HighlanderNorth1
      @HighlanderNorth1 Год назад +5

      🍇 The top, world class vineyards always package their wine in either plastic bags inside a box, or in a bottle with a screw on cap.... ^This 159 year old wine was from a cheapskate vineyard, evidenced by it's lack of a screw-on cap!

    • @jama211
      @jama211 Год назад +3

      Love it... or mixed with some cola :D

    • @BVargas78
      @BVargas78 Год назад

      @@jama211 epic!

  • @LarsonLake
    @LarsonLake Год назад +551

    It's at times like these that I wish we had a way to record smell and taste. It's a shame that only a few people can enjoy this before it's gone forever.

    • @precisionhaze6594
      @precisionhaze6594 Год назад

      Sucks to suck

    • @HeatherSierraVEVO
      @HeatherSierraVEVO Год назад +92

      That’s the beauty of the world. It’s ephemeral. Each individual experience only lasts for so long, and is unique and fleeting. It makes you really appreciate the sanctity of the present moment.

    • @davidmcdonnel4831
      @davidmcdonnel4831 Год назад +2

      Smell-o-Vision

    • @jasperlincoln594
      @jasperlincoln594 Год назад +8

      As a chemist the closest thing we can do to record smell & taste by finding it’s chemical composition! It’s just not perfect with current technology to record and replicate all the proportions and subtleties of the compounds present

    • @igitur
      @igitur Год назад +3

      But also in this day and age nearly a million people can witness the event from the comfort of their own home/office.

  • @2FRESH-4U
    @2FRESH-4U 5 месяцев назад +3

    Amazing to think of all the souls that have come and gone since this wine was made

  • @freeme_frommisery
    @freeme_frommisery Год назад

    Kostya, thank you for such an amazing video!👍

  • @babayagaslobbedaknobba
    @babayagaslobbedaknobba Год назад +72

    I'm not even a wine drinker, but this dude has me wanting to taste that wine. Lol

  • @wineking
    @wineking Год назад +1778

    Thanks for sharing your precious wine with us, Konstantin. ES WAR SO LECKER!!!

    • @adranscyth1556
      @adranscyth1556 Год назад +40

      in dutch: "het was zo lekker"

    • @itsmederek1
      @itsmederek1 Год назад +24

      Collaboration please! Love your content Jay

    • @markyochoa
      @markyochoa Год назад +17

      The king is here!!!

    • @MrFlorinC
      @MrFlorinC Год назад +9

      Collaboration needs to happen. Make it happen! #letsgooo #packmas

    • @charliep9066
      @charliep9066 Год назад +5

      When will you upload new content, Jay!! I've been waiting for more videos from you for SO long !!!

  • @DJSven13
    @DJSven13 Год назад

    Only being 29 on the 17th of this month, I’ve just started wine tasting a few month or so ago. Seeing people like you enjoying it so well. The oldest wine I’ve tasted was from the year I was born in 1993 that one of my wine tasting friends had. He’s what started me on my journey. He also loves going out and trying different types of cigars, mead, moonshine, and beer, so I’m just there for the ride. I’m enjoying it so far. Thanks to people like you and him. Enjoy the little things my friend.

  • @savagesanity
    @savagesanity Год назад +562

    I’m not sure how I ended up on this video, but I’m glad I did. It’s like a history lesson, but with wine. I’ve never been a big wine drinker, mostly whiskey. But I think I want to try more now. Also, I love the room you’re in.

    • @phimuskapsi
      @phimuskapsi Год назад +4

      Same thing. RUclips must be pushing Whiskey enthusiasts to other alcohol enthusiast pages. The only one I sub to is Whiskey Tribe!

    • @hextremelydesirable1648
      @hextremelydesirable1648 Год назад

      @@phimuskapsi same thing.. and its just the algorithm .. HEX coin $0.0 84 and pulsechain coming soon ($PLS)
      today
      is may 23 2022

    • @fucuszullanti7877
      @fucuszullanti7877 Год назад

      I hate to break it to you but Whiskey and Wine are both alcoholic…. They give you the same end result, you’ve been sold a concept and now you’re repackaging it and telling other people you’re a “whiskey drinker” are you also down syndrome?

  • @joelmartins7794
    @joelmartins7794 Год назад +51

    That is simply amazing. Im from Portugal near Porto, this wine is old enough to have been made by my great grandfather and tastes unbelievable. Wow. 🇵🇹🇵🇹🇵🇹

    • @jamie.777
      @jamie.777 Год назад

      🇵🇹🇵🇹

    • @Fit_soldier
      @Fit_soldier Год назад

      @@jamie.777 você fala português?

  • @followingthesunrises8616
    @followingthesunrises8616 10 месяцев назад

    Thank you for sharing this experience with us ❤️

  • @manojdalmia6181
    @manojdalmia6181 Год назад

    Your joy and giddiness at smelling and tasting this wine made me feel joyful and giddy. Thank you for this video!

  • @brucemurchiedean6348
    @brucemurchiedean6348 Год назад +62

    In the year 2003 I turned 21 and my dad pulled out a bottle of 200yr old brandi that was given to him on my day of birth in 1982. He put it in a large brandi balloon and heated the glass slightly. It was still to this day the most amazing flavoured brandi I ever tasted

    • @powerinknowledge2392
      @powerinknowledge2392 Год назад +4

      In 2003 I turned 1. I’m gonna be allowed to drink in less than a year. Crazy asf to me

    • @CarlJohnson-wk3rv
      @CarlJohnson-wk3rv Год назад +2

      @@powerinknowledge2392 let me guess, American?

    • @iambrandonpoo
      @iambrandonpoo Год назад +5

      @@CarlJohnson-wk3rv 21 in the story, so obviously. now why does that matter again?

    • @CarlJohnson-wk3rv
      @CarlJohnson-wk3rv Год назад

      @@iambrandonpoo it’s silly in a nation that claims to have the most freedom you can buy an assault rifle before a beer. Backward country

    • @powerinknowledge2392
      @powerinknowledge2392 Год назад

      @@CarlJohnson-wk3rv that would be correct

  • @pellestorck3776
    @pellestorck3776 Год назад +92

    I actually had a 1863 "tawny" (would be called colheita now) port, not sure what brand but it was amazing. Back in the 80s a wealthy friend throw a party and opened this bottle. Me and my sister was cooking so the only ones sober enough to appreciate it..

    • @eurocase1712
      @eurocase1712 Год назад +5

      colheita means "harvest" in portuguese, colheita 2011 = harvest of 2011 is not the wine's name or the type of wine.

    • @pellestorck3776
      @pellestorck3776 Год назад +1

      Colheita is a Tawny from a single vintage. So is a type of Port.

  • @FlyingTreg
    @FlyingTreg Год назад

    Thank you for sharing this experience!! Wonderful!

  • @thescentman3678
    @thescentman3678 Год назад

    I love your humor aswell as the description

  • @katherinetutschek4757
    @katherinetutschek4757 Год назад +59

    I'm so glad I could enjoy this vicariously through you. That port looks incredible, I would so savour tasting 1863...what a beautiful door to the past to step through!!

  • @gloriousradio
    @gloriousradio Год назад +54

    This appeared in my recommendations and I'm not mad at all, I could smell that coming out of the screen! The eyes gave it away as much as anything, just a moment of pure bliss! Just think how many families and people that bottle has been passed between, each thinking, "no, not today, it's too special," only to end up in the hands of someone who knows what to do with it and can share it with the world. Subbed :)

    • @kikim7873
      @kikim7873 Год назад

      A very fitting end for that bottle. The ending it deserved.

  • @Avedis-G
    @Avedis-G Год назад

    I’m not a connoisseur at all and know nothing about wine but watching somebody else enjoy this so much was really cool. Thanks for the video!

  • @sKraat528
    @sKraat528 3 месяца назад

    First time seeing your channel. Appreciate your communication and level of detail, earned a follower!

  • @laurence4133
    @laurence4133 Год назад +21

    My God, I've never wanted to taste something through a screen so badly. Thanks for the video, this was a really great watch!

  • @albertlay8927
    @albertlay8927 Год назад +36

    I'm not much of a wine lover, but I'm fascinated by this. Just thinking about the history, the idea that more than a century and a half has gone by, and now, for the first time in decades, that wine is seeing daylight and experiencing new air. I hope you've shared the bottle.

  • @danwallach8826
    @danwallach8826 Год назад

    I'm delighted it turned out great!

  • @matthewsgaming5333
    @matthewsgaming5333 Год назад

    Love this! Awesome review

  • @philipwong454
    @philipwong454 Год назад +175

    You make it sound so yummy. My mouth was actually watering as I watch how you describe the wine and imagining it in my mouth. Well done Konstantin.

    • @KonstantinBaumMasterofWine
      @KonstantinBaumMasterofWine  Год назад +11

      Thank you 😋

    • @hoogstraten4271
      @hoogstraten4271 Год назад +2

      @@KonstantinBaumMasterofWine how can wine survive so long without being infested with bacteria or other bio organisms? it makes no sense 😕

    • @dweep9546
      @dweep9546 Год назад

      ​@@hoogstraten4271 alcohol kills bacteria.

    • @ronaldstewart3467
      @ronaldstewart3467 Год назад

      I agree you make it sound like great sex, would it be with a man or a woman? I bet it was a closeted secret......

    • @hoogstraten4271
      @hoogstraten4271 Год назад +1

      @@dweep9546 thanks for the answer but your alchaol killing bacteria comment seems to have dissapeared.

  • @randylevy
    @randylevy Год назад +38

    This bottle is like a time machine. Amazing!

  • @chadmorrison3920
    @chadmorrison3920 5 месяцев назад

    Truly incredible! Thank you! ❤😊

  • @marksilverman3693
    @marksilverman3693 Год назад

    Thank you. A wonderful video. I enjoy vintage ports. Thirty + years ago, while in the UK, I purchased two mixed cases of 63 port. I drank them in the 90s and 00s, and they were extraordinary. This port must be amazing. To have received a bottle of this vintage as a gift is remarkable. I envy your good fortune.

  • @samsungtvmail
    @samsungtvmail Год назад +56

    My favorite wine ever tried was 80-year-old port. It was a similar color it was pretty strong like you said almost like a brandy but much richer and softer. With notes of raisins plums and pears , with a silky buttery texture. If I could ever find anything similar I would love to purchase it.

  • @markjohnson6918
    @markjohnson6918 Год назад +29

    Hi Konstantin, loved your reaction. The oldest wine I have drunk is also a port, but from 1895. It was part of a tasting I put on called the 100 years tasting, where we drank a wine from every decade back to the 1890's. It too was still vibrant and complex, but alas, by the time we drank it, we were all a tad drunk, so didn't appreciate or remember it as we should. 😊 Such a wonderful tasting though, that sadly, will never be repeated.
    Best regards and thank you
    Mark J

  • @tibormolnar8056
    @tibormolnar8056 Год назад

    I can see on your face that you are very happy, and I became so after watching your video, I'm always happy when someone selflessly feels good, I never thought there were such old wines

  • @m.c.fromnyc2187
    @m.c.fromnyc2187 Год назад +3

    Fascinating video! I am a big fan of fortified wines, mostly Port and Madeira. But, to avoid the cork extracting disaster, you could have used the "Ah So Wine Opener", which is especially made for old, stubborn and brittle corks.

  • @charlesw9875
    @charlesw9875 Год назад +6

    Your ecstatic look of relief on smelling the wine said everything. You're so lucky to have enjoyed this very rare treat!

  • @gmill7911
    @gmill7911 Год назад +11

    As an aspiring collector, trying to slowly build a small cellar of nice wines to share with friends, this was pure inspiration. The idea of a wine not only surviving, but developing into a masterpiece over one hundred and fifty years is validation of the mystery and allure of wine and wine making.

  • @acg00
    @acg00 Год назад

    Amazing! Once in a lifetime experience. Thanks for sharing.

  • @drewbarker8504
    @drewbarker8504 Год назад +7

    I think the oldest bottle I’ve ever had was a 42 year old bottle of Cabernet from Carmel Valley. The long port cork in it was a pain to get out, but it turned out to be a dynamite wine. (Paired pretty well with itself too! 😆)

  • @BradGryphonn
    @BradGryphonn Год назад +76

    I am not a wine person. I have dabbled, but never got into it much (talk to me about bourbons and naturally brewed bottle-finished beers) However, I enjoy the experience of watching someone enjoy their passion. This was a great video.

    • @davidca96
      @davidca96 Год назад +1

      me too, I dont drink anymore but I like seeing people enjoying a hobby or passion.

    • @apjumpmanjoey1fan925
      @apjumpmanjoey1fan925 Год назад +2

      Nerd

    • @BradGryphonn
      @BradGryphonn Год назад +2

      @@apjumpmanjoey1fan925 Definitely a beer nerd.

    • @theresnocovid1932
      @theresnocovid1932 Год назад

      Copy and paste this comment

    • @xxxxxx5868
      @xxxxxx5868 Год назад +1

      Same here, I don't think I'll ever drink this stuff in my life lol, I would waste it anyways, I probably can't tell the difference. I'll leave the exotic stuff to the experts 🤣

  • @georges617
    @georges617 Год назад +82

    The oldest I've had was also a Burmester port. The 1975 Colheita, to be precise, and what a wine this was. Sweet, but so rich and full of flavours and an absolute joy to smell.
    Though my favourite port for special occasions is the 1983 Burmester Colheita. So addictive that I could drink and smell it all day.

    • @fighterinmkiwiscience3517
      @fighterinmkiwiscience3517 Год назад

      Why people like old wine when they can get new wine easily

    • @georges617
      @georges617 Год назад +2

      @@fighterinmkiwiscience3517 Because letting a wine mature for a while gives it a much more complex and full of character aromas and taste. It's something that you can appreciate more. Yeah, there are some young wines that can taste great, but there's a reason most wines being appreciated by experts and consumers the most are the ones who have been aged for a while.
      As a fan of port wine myself, I can definitely taste the difference in quality between an 8€ bottle from the supermarket and a nice 20-year old Tawny port. One is for mainstream use at best, the other for special occasions with good friends.

    • @showcase-me
      @showcase-me Год назад +1

      @@fighterinmkiwiscience3517 almost for the same reason they like dry aged beef, parmesan, dried fruits, and mature cheeses, pickled veggies and cured meats. Go figure.

  • @_KMD
    @_KMD Год назад +8

    The oldest wine I’ve ever tried is an 1895 Madeira. It blew me away with the layers of complexity that just kept revealing themselves as I enjoyed each sip.
    Thanks for “sharing” the port with us. Great video!

  • @videodudeX
    @videodudeX Год назад

    I used to be a big fan of Ports. Unfortunately, I can no longer partake. I really like this vid . Your reactions and knowledge make it very well done!

  • @andrewwebster15
    @andrewwebster15 Год назад +6

    Wow. Thank you for sharing this with us. The wine, the story, and your joy.
    I’m in a different “wine bracket” than you and most here, I expect, but when I had my first serious Barolo, guided by a sommelier, when I was used to drinking entry level American wines, it changed my life.

  • @miguelconceicao4766
    @miguelconceicao4766 Год назад +44

    This specific Porto Wine still appears for sale in some auctions, and there is one for sale in a Wine Shop in Portugal for 2.550€.
    So, what a gift you found.

  • @Feed_The_Fink
    @Feed_The_Fink Год назад

    Their is nothing like watching someone Love what they do. We need more of that

  • @udogrunhoff5936
    @udogrunhoff5936 Год назад +66

    From the bottom of my heart I am so glad for you that this wine was so wonderful! Great stuff!
    One could tell from your expression that even after the thousands of bottles you opened in your life, this was a special one. Even for you...
    The oldest wine I had so far was a 1929 Bordeaux which unfortunately did not live up to my expectations.
    The oldest great wine I had was a 1959 Mouton Rothschild where I had also tears in my eyes...
    BTW: You must have great friends who give such an extraordinary bottle to you. I am glad you discovered it in your heap...

  • @JuliusLagman
    @JuliusLagman Год назад +8

    You are the most fortunate man in the world. Opportunities like that come once in a lifetime for some and never for most of us. I could see from your reaction that the experience was awe-inspiring.

  • @johnnypalughi1192
    @johnnypalughi1192 Год назад

    Best video evah! Thanks. Do more!

  • @mikeperks1175
    @mikeperks1175 Год назад

    100 points - great review ! Oldest wine I had was perhaps 20 years old from New Zealand - it was epic

  • @SlashXIV
    @SlashXIV Год назад +80

    It's amazing stuff like that still exists, and to also watch a high quality live reaction and feedback from a wine connoisseur makes it more interesting. Like tasting the past. I'd love to taste something like that.

  • @johnnycashew9101
    @johnnycashew9101 Год назад +19

    This is such a historical rarity... I'm so glad you recorded this. It's something most of us will never witness in our lifetime.
    merci beaucoup

  • @timmyers9825
    @timmyers9825 Год назад

    You,my friend,are reaping the fruit of your expertise, Congratulations! Just ran into your page 10-14-22 and glad I did.Enjoyed your Sonoma Pino video and now the 1863.Look forward to more videos,thanks.

  • @frankiegoes9939
    @frankiegoes9939 11 месяцев назад

    holy fuck....... I'm so jealous right now!!!!! This is quite amazing, a bottle this old that ends up so good. A few years ago, I was lucky to taste a 75 year old Cognac, and I did cry.... It was soooooooooooo.good.... I was very anxious when you were in the process of opening the bottle. I was so relieved when you succeeded. And the colour of it, so brown/copper tone. Very cool to watch! Thank you Konstantin!!

  • @yaps66
    @yaps66 Год назад +4

    Loved your reactions to the wines! The WTX and OMG reactions really spoke to me and conveyed both your astonishment and pleasure! Envious!

  • @TRSWOODWORKING
    @TRSWOODWORKING Год назад +3

    First time watching you and this made me smile. Congratulations on being articulate, accurate, and delicate. Bravo!

  • @MDL-lw9my
    @MDL-lw9my Год назад

    Amazing! Cheers 🥂

  • @siegfriedetzkorn2256
    @siegfriedetzkorn2256 4 месяца назад +1

    The oldest wine I ever tasted was a 1969 Bourgueil in 1999. It was a Christmas treat for my family.
    I was a student then and was lucky to live near a wine shop where they had monthly tastings either for free or for a very small fee. So I came to taste wines I woukd never have bought just to try them, due to the confinements in my budget. It was a lovely experience as every session had a different subject (Bordeaux, the New World, white wines for Summer etc.) At the session labelled "Loire", I came to taste, among others, the ones of Chinon, Bougueil and St. Nicolas de Bourgueil. The wines all based on Cabernet Franc were generally at a very young age with the Chinon being more pleasant already. The Bourgueils (I include the St. Nicolas here) were not ready yet. However, you could taste that it was all there: All components of taste were in them, even though still very unbalanced at the time. Every wine you would try thereafter would have tasted like water if you would not take a break in between.
    My friends did not like the young Bourgueils, actually. But I was flashed and curious how some of them would be at an adequate age.
    The same wine shop offered this 1969 Bourgueil. The price was beyond my means for a regular drink but for Christmas, it was reasonable. So, when we opened the bottle, the whole room was immediately filled with the beautiful smell of this wine. It was not only still alive but was among the at least 10 greatest I ever tasted. Ah, memories...

  • @eliasmarius
    @eliasmarius Год назад +27

    The oldest wine I’ve tasted was a 1967 Unico from Vega Sicilia. My grandparents held a small wine tasting for the family: other wines were a 2018 Tignanello, a 2007 Opus One and a 2000 Solaia. It was phenomenal. The Unico was over its peak but it still was a great experience. After everybody left, my brother and my grandfather were putting the corks back in the wines but the Unico cork accidentally broke and a big chunk fell in. We had to drink the rest of the bottle right there and then. Core memory right there!

    • @MsJavaWolf
      @MsJavaWolf Год назад

      The Unico is such a great wine, I would rate the last bottle I had 100/100, it was amazing.

  • @mynameisandong
    @mynameisandong Год назад +31

    this was so exciting!! 🤩🤩 learned a lot and loved to see you get emotional over tasting a 💯! 🤣

  • @fernandohoyosferreyra5555
    @fernandohoyosferreyra5555 Год назад

    Increíble 😯 que maravilla experiencia nos has compartido 🌌

  • @4prathamm
    @4prathamm 6 месяцев назад

    I have never drank wine or any alcohol as a matter of fact in my life i don't know why i am getting recommended such videos but loved the video, 159 years old wine is crazy🤯

  • @stephaneclerc667
    @stephaneclerc667 Год назад +15

    Sommelier here, just discovered your channel, great content! Love your enthusiasm when you tried it, I have the same kind of reaction when trying something amazing and sometimes my colleagues think I'm a bit over the top.
    Oldest wine I tried was also a port and from the same vintage!
    Porto finest vintage grand riserva Abernethy and Wehde 1863.
    Light amber color, very complex, slightly spicy, taste a bit like a calvados, load of greengage.. It was quite nice got to say.

  • @peterburlin8198
    @peterburlin8198 Год назад +5

    The look in your eyes first time smelling that wine was priceless. Like a little boy at christmas getting that present he never dreamed of! Oldest wine Ive ever tried was a ’77 Col D’Orcia Brunello on my 42nd birthday, the wine the same age. Was also very happy and surprised to find that it smelled and tasted wonderful straight out of the bottle. Bought another bottle of the same wine and vintage for next year, but that one was barely drinkable.

  • @pjubo
    @pjubo Год назад

    oldest wine ive tasted was more than 50 years old as of 2020, it really hadnt been stored properly, and for some reason it gave me the burning feeling in the chest that you get from spirits. Was a really cool experience!

  • @viltsuville1
    @viltsuville1 Год назад +2

    I like my red wine the right way. Mixed with Pepsi Max... Amazing video, really interesting history and great presentation!

  • @marcuswidmann9620
    @marcuswidmann9620 Год назад +8

    The oldest wine I tasted so far was a 1966 Chateau La Gaffelière. Great condition, perfect drinkable. Tasted (beliefe me or not) like smoked strawberries, earthy, plum notes, smooth. Just amazing.
    The other one was a 1982 Chateau Margaux. Spectacular finish, evolved during the whole evening. What a vintage!

  • @mreidbailey
    @mreidbailey Год назад +4

    What a great experience. Thanks for sharing with us. My oldest wine tasting was one day in the Douro valley where I got to taste 40, 60, and a 90 year white port. Absolutely amazing. And I’m nursing a bottle of Kopke 1966 Colheita in my wine fridge.

  • @Au_Eclat
    @Au_Eclat 5 месяцев назад

    OMG, I want some so badly lol. I really enjoyed you drinking this wine almost as if I was drinking it myself. So awesome

  • @anonaki-mt6xb
    @anonaki-mt6xb 8 месяцев назад +1

    1875 Madeira Barbieto Malvasia - absolutely divine, as if the liquid never even touched my palate. Olive green rim, with notes of toffee, nut, deep dried fruit, and time-capsule etherealness. A single check on my lifelist. Cheers!

  • @tedrichards4194
    @tedrichards4194 Год назад +14

    I've been lucky enough to taste two 200-year-old wines - a 1795 Barbeito Terrantez Madeira in 1995, and an 1815 Madeia in 2015, both at my wine tasting club's Christmas party.
    A funny note about the 1795: One of the directors of the club was also a member of a Madeira tasting club which had just had their own Christmas party. When someone commented how wonderful the 1795 Barbeito was, Bill replied "Well it's not the best 1795 Madeira I've had this week, but it's not the worst either."

  • @robdobson5056
    @robdobson5056 Год назад +5

    You can tell this guy love his wine! His passion for wine come through in this video.