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OLD vs NEW - The battle of the WINE WORLDs 

Konstantin Baum - Master of Wine
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I have used this glass in this Video: RIEDEL Performance Riesling.
I have tasted the following wine in this Video:
2021 Arnaud Lambert Clos de Midi Brézé Loire France - 23 US $
2021 Mullineux Kloof Street Chenin Blanc Swartland South Africa - 16 US $
2019 Mathiasson Chardonnay Linda Vista Napa Valley USA - 30 US $
2019 Wolmuth Chardonnay Ried Sausaler Schlössl Südsteiermark Austria - 22 US $
2017 Peter Lehmann The Barossan Grenache Barossa Valley Australia - 16 US $
2019 Pagos del Moncayo Prados Collecíon Garnacha Campo de Borja Spain - 12 US $
2019 Valérie Courrèges Bois Carmin Cahors France - 30 US $
2019 Colomé Estate Malbec Salta Argentina - 23 US $
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.
The Oxford Companion to wine defines the Old World as “Europe and the rest of the Mediterranean basin such as the Near East and North Africa.” Other definitions say only Europe is the old world, but we know today, that the first wine production took place along the borders between Europe and Asia.
The New World describes the rest of the wine world. Wine countries in the Americas, Australia, Southern Africa, Australia, and the eastern Parts of Asia. New World Wine started to be produced after 1500 during the Age of Exploration and the Colonial era when Europeans settles in the new world.
But what is the difference between the two worlds?
When I practiced for the Master of Wine I usually started my blind tasting funneling process wondering: Is this a New World or an Old World wine as there are stylistic differences between the two.
In VERY general terms The Old world has stricter rules and a strong tradition when it comes to viticulture and winemaking. Many old-world regions are dominated by many small producers. The wines are often made more traditionally, premium wine production is more small scale and wines can be less “clean”.
In contrast, The New World is experimenting more and using advances in science to produce wines that are more tailored to meet current market trends. Also, wineries tend to be bigger and might be less focused on small vineyard selections.
Remember - I am generalizing here - but the notion of Terroir, the sense place of a vineyard is more important in the Old World than in the New World. You, therefore, find more references to specific vineyard sites on old-world labels. On the other hand: The grape variety is more important in the New World and is more likely to appear on the label.

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7 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 221   
@tommy254
@tommy254 2 года назад
Konstantin, you are delivering top notch wine content on a regular basis like no on else. Keep up the good work . I’m looking forward to what’s coming!
@Heeman1119
@Heeman1119 2 года назад
Leon seriously has the World's greatest job, and thankfully he does DO a great job as well.
@schferleon
@schferleon 2 года назад
Hehe thanks so much!
@alech8336
@alech8336 2 года назад
Love how you include when you don't get it right - gives the rest of us hope. Another super video!
@glennjohnson4919
@glennjohnson4919 2 года назад
I try both, constantly exploring. Utterly amazed at your ability to recognize wines.
@travioh
@travioh 2 года назад
You’re right! It’s getting more and more difficult to recognize old and new world, especially after a certain price point! 😁 Fun times! A Salta Malbec- sneaky Leon 😏
@tlhuffman
@tlhuffman 2 года назад
When they are at their best, I prefer old world. However, I find new world wines to be more consistent in quality, so I trust them more. I find French wine in particular quite variable in quality from bottle to bottle.
@peterburlin8198
@peterburlin8198 2 года назад
Very impressive blind tasting Konstantin, never mind the mixup in the last pairing! I’m learning too, usually I knew the grape varieties before you said it by your deductions
@MisterHansome
@MisterHansome 8 дней назад
I am becoming a fan of your channel. I am into wine since 1988 and wine is in my blood. Thank you of making my days happieer.
@darkerbinding6933
@darkerbinding6933 2 года назад
Thank you Konstantin. Your videos are enjoyable for those of us that are casual wine drinkers. I really appreciate your down to earth style.
@eric1richards
@eric1richards 2 года назад
Very impressive tasting! I am equally impressed with your double bottle pouring.
@ApothecaryTerry
@ApothecaryTerry 2 года назад
14:58 - Konstantin doing the best smug face I've seen for a while. I've love to see a follow-up video to this, of how to identify old vs new world wines. I guess most of us watching have picked a lot of it up by now, by I think it'd be great to see it spelled out really clearly. In fact, a whole series of "how to identify" stuff would be amazing, different grapes, old vs new world, different ages (i.e. crianza, reserva and gran reserva) and all the other things that wine has. It's all second nature for MWs but I've found myself just recently being able to start to identfy grape varieties and a few other characteristics and I find it a really interesting topic. To answer the question: I don't know if I prefer old or new world. Generally I go for reds from Italy and southern France (especially Languedoc) but also South Africa and Australia. Recently I've been getting into Cab Sav and Merlot especially though, which makes me think I should drink more Bordeaux...but the cost of everything (not just wine) makes me think I should not be drinking Bordeaux at all!
@adrianbuchanan8428
@adrianbuchanan8428 2 года назад
I love both. Being from South Africa and spoiled for local choice it is however refreshing to taste wines from other parts of the world.
@gustavomgomes
@gustavomgomes 2 года назад
One world !! Lol 😂 ! Very impressive tasting . In the last round , I saw the shape of the bottle and being from South America I know that very few Argentinian malbecs are bottled in Burgundy shape bottles. But the Salta wines are very fresh and for sure Leon messed with you !!!
@germanpenn
@germanpenn 2 года назад
true that! Reds from the Salta region are more tannic, potent and structured, not the typical Argentine malbec from Mendoza. The last round was rigged! :)
@lambda314
@lambda314 2 года назад
Dear Konstantin, Thanks for the great videos. One thing which puzzles me about tasting in general, and especially when consideriing difficult blind tastings- i often have the impression that wine needs "to open up" (breath) after opening etc. You seem to just open, pour and drink. Do you compensate for the fact that the wine has been opened just before? Or is the subtle change of taste etc irrelevant for this purpose of tastings (or even irrelevant at all)?
@numanuma20
@numanuma20 2 года назад
Matthiasson is one of my favorite wineries in Napa Valley. I wish you lived in the US as the wine club is worth the money. They are minimal intervention wineries that makes unique wines for their members. They make an awesome Pinot Meunier that reminds me of a fruiter Gamay. The interesting thing about the wine making is that they mainly use used oak barrels and keep the wines lower in alcohol than most of Napa Valley.
@drmatthewhorkey
@drmatthewhorkey 2 года назад
Niccce catch. Good to see Matthiasson get some love as well as Santa Barbara County (maybe my favorite region in the world). I personally LOVE Aussie Grenache. The last set is TOUGH as younger producers in Cahors are trying to make cleaner wines.
@gabrielghintuiala3767
@gabrielghintuiala3767 2 года назад
Would you do a eastern europe wines tasting soon :) ? Especially with local grape varieties like saperavi , feteasca neagra, furmint
@sypialnia_studio
@sypialnia_studio 2 года назад
Colome makes very good wines in an absolutely unique place, you can feel the altitude in their wines, they start at 1700 meters and reach 3111 metres of altitude! No wonder you took it for European wine!
@andreasdietrich7005
@andreasdietrich7005 2 года назад
Hi, when you make your Australien Wine Preview ,don’t forget Tasmania I taste a few wines there and I was Surprised of the Quality.
@HNCS2006
@HNCS2006 2 года назад
I never ever expected a LOTR reference!! Can you do a live event where we all sit down and watch LOTR to wine? That would be the coolest.
@juanito2109
@juanito2109 2 года назад
Amazing video, the last wine was quite a surprise!!
@CzarDodon
@CzarDodon Год назад
Since I live in Italy, north eastern Italy, I can afford the luxury of choosing from a vast range of wines from Italy and bordering countries, and that's probably for the best, the less wine travels the better for the wine and the environment. But if/when I venture to the new world I'll be happy to bear your distinctions in mind. Thanks for another great video.
@solomonmengeu1003
@solomonmengeu1003 2 года назад
I think whether you drink mainly Old World or New World wines has a lot to do with your budget, availability, market preferences and what most consumers in your part of the world purchase & drink. For me wines should have elegance, balance, typicity, intensity, complexity and length. I find that most of my wines are Old World wines because they can be found at more reasonable price points. If I want to find New World wines with the above attributes I have to look much harder and pay more per bottle. I also agree the differentiation between Old vs. New World is becoming more blurred now, as winemakers are trying to respect their terroir or keep up with changing consumer preferences. Another great video Konstantin, very fun and educational. Looking forward to the Aussie video, it would be cool if you were to include Aussie wines made from Italian/Spanish/Portuguese varietals, in addition to the "international French" ones.
@arispagoropoulos3798
@arispagoropoulos3798 2 года назад
True, preferences are one thing but they have to meet the budget to make it to the table. Personally I would love for wine to face zero tariffs everywhere to create optionality for the consumers, and compete on quality rather than price barriers and misplaced patriotism. The more there is to try, the better chance to discover something new that feels right.
@matthewyoung5252
@matthewyoung5252 2 года назад
Had to give you a like just for the Lord of The Rings reference! Another great video, quality as always.
@DanielAllenLuka
@DanielAllenLuka 2 года назад
Do you post videos or bits of them to the other social media platforms? You deserve so much more attention. Without a doubt my favorite wine channel and I just freaking love your palate. If you don’t get famous soon, fire your media person :) unless that’s you, don’t fire you, hire somebody
@duncanwmaxwell
@duncanwmaxwell 2 года назад
Another great video Konstantin, and here’s a +1 for an Australian special! Hoping you might sneak in some Yarra Valley or Tasmanian Pinot!
@karlinggard
@karlinggard 2 года назад
Very cool video, you have an exceptionally well trained sensory system along with some excellent deduction skills! Interesting to see how you got Cahors and Argentina mixed up, I was completely with you based on how you described the wines. When you do Australia, I hope you include a Pinot from Yarra Valley or somewhere else in Victoria! Looking forward to that video.
@lcpholman
@lcpholman 2 года назад
Yes please! Or Mornington Peninsula - and maybe some Orange Syrah :)
@comradesomo
@comradesomo 2 года назад
Gippsland is the best - Bass Phillip, William Downie, Philippa Farr, and Lightfoot!
@karlinggard
@karlinggard 2 года назад
@@comradesomo Farr is outstanding, and Oakridge is one of my budget favorites.
@bugsygoo
@bugsygoo 2 года назад
Riesling from the Clare valley!
@tonydeltablues
@tonydeltablues 2 года назад
Hi Konstantin, Another great video. I loved your facial expression when you got the me when got the Argentinian and Cahors wines the 'wrong way round' :-) You're a top bloke for being humble and recognising you are always learning on the wine knowledge journey. Look foward to your next video. Tony p.s would love to see you explore the wines of the Ribera Del Duero at some point?
@robdielemans9189
@robdielemans9189 2 года назад
Well done! Depends on what I want, if it's sparkling then definitely old world ,Champagne, Bourgogne, Jura, Cava Brut Nature and of course England. Reds are sort of 50/50 between Italy and Spain or Argentina, rarely from France. And whites are all over the place, dry PX whites from Chile, Chardonnays mainly from New Zealand and north Italy and Rieslings primarily from Germany.
@pintag3369
@pintag3369 2 года назад
I drink much more New World than Old World, but I’m value-driven, so I prefer wines from both - like Beaujolais, Chianti, and Australia. There are so many high-quality wines from all regions in 2022 - the best values come from all over.
@MrJcalvino
@MrJcalvino 2 года назад
If you are seeking value in Old World buy from Spain and specially Portugal. Cheers!
@iplaylax22
@iplaylax22 2 года назад
Literally there are tons of great values from the old world…. When you want super high quality at good value you have to look outside France and California. But you can absolutely find some amazing wines at affordable prices from literally everywhere! Just realize you’ll have to sift through a bunch of mediocre stuff, but that’s the burden we must bare.
@FoardenotFord
@FoardenotFord Год назад
If you like French wines, the Rhone valley has a lot of value, especially if you look outside the most famous appellation of Chateauneuf du Pape. There are a lot of producers who make exceptional Cotes du Rhone in the $18-25 range.
@KonstantinBaumMasterofWine
@KonstantinBaumMasterofWine 2 года назад
Go to shakerandspoon.com/?discount_code=KONSTANTINBAUMMW&RU-vid&Konstantin%20Baum&next=%2F and use code konstantinbaummw to get $20 off your first box! Thanks to Shaker & Spoon for sponsoring today's video.
@TheDesertWineGuy
@TheDesertWineGuy 2 года назад
At least as far as old world reds goes, old world wines seem to be more in your face and busy in the sense of being structured and presenting a wine that screams where it's grapes were grown. You can almost taste the wine lineage. Konstantin, if you can, please try the 2019 Details By Sinegal, Cabernet Sauvignon. I just got done reviewing it and thought it was amazing. I paid $25 for the wine but it sells on the internet for $50, I think you will love it.
@antoonvercauteren1721
@antoonvercauteren1721 2 года назад
Best wine RU-vidr. Period.
@timothywebb4379
@timothywebb4379 Год назад
I found this recently and subscribed straight away,wine is not a luxury but living.drinking Quality red everyday is a beautiful thing 🍷😀
@davidecester3873
@davidecester3873 2 года назад
I love Australian Syrah. I found them very intense, expecially the one from Maclaren Valley. like give a bite to a medium rare rob eye steak...the feeling of blood and rustiness amaze me. very unique
@giuliotoffano4763
@giuliotoffano4763 2 года назад
Ahaha great quote of LOTR!!
@anssiairas9179
@anssiairas9179 Год назад
Really interesting blind comparison on the Chenins. South Africa has these days lots of top notch Chenins with a reasonable price tag.
@gerhard15
@gerhard15 2 года назад
Very nice blind tasting. I'm also going for the Loire Chenin Blanc. Ultimately the old world. But I haven't explored the new world that much yet. At least with more quality red wines.
@tedgey4286
@tedgey4286 Год назад
I love it when he's right and flexes on the wine
@SirWussiePants
@SirWussiePants 2 года назад
Love the tasting! I am a bit sad that the worlds are colliding though. I don't go to France or Germany to eat McDonalds and I think each region should have its own flair and character. Personally, I miss the old oaky/buttery California Chardonnays (but then I don't miss the old high alcohol, tannic California monstrosities). I live relatively near the NY Finger Lakes so I am mostly drinking new world Riesling and Gewurztraminers these days but a good old world wine is always worth a taste.
@tarawalker7193
@tarawalker7193 2 года назад
I guess the first one! Sidenote - I too love The LOTR!
@tomryderband
@tomryderband 2 года назад
Have lived in Australia for years now and always stayed away from Peter Lehmann (Klingt auch ein bisschen zu deutsch der Name). It had that mass producer image to it for some reason. Super excited to get a bottle and give it a try, it's super affordable, too. Keen for that episode on Aussie wines.
@headdownflyin
@headdownflyin 9 месяцев назад
I thoroughly enjoyed this blind tasting, you were spot on, picking the regions and grapes, also new & old world. The last tasting seemed like a curveball, but you didn't get it wrong, just reversed, brilliant! Cheers Konstantin, raising my glass of Abeja 2018 Heather Hill Vineyard Cabernet Sauvignon from Walla Walla Washington for a job well done.
@surewinenot7113
@surewinenot7113 2 года назад
Geat video. I love trying to guess the wine before you say it based on the description - I got Chardonnay, Australia and Spain this time. Eucalyptus really stands out for me too. Contrats on the 100/100 wine video going viral! Can you please do a video recommending some outstanding but affordable wines for Christmas (when the time is right. Sorry for using the C word so early)?!
@williamrobinson7435
@williamrobinson7435 2 года назад
Great! I have at times been pleasantly surprised by Argentinan Malbec. Nice video, thanks Konstantin! Cheers. 🍷👍
@asianarrow77
@asianarrow77 2 года назад
Great video as always!! Keen for the Australian wine video!!!!
@williamolenchenko5772
@williamolenchenko5772 2 года назад
This is very difficult to do! You are amazing.
@psychotropicalresearch5653
@psychotropicalresearch5653 Год назад
Fun indeed. Lots of challenging change, try some of the new early picked Australian Grenache with can be mistaken for Pinot, the modern looking labels usually indicate that style.
@kyrylobutenko
@kyrylobutenko 2 года назад
Love Colome, they are using whole clusters when they press the wine if I'm not mistaken. Great value Malbec
@Neurability
@Neurability 11 месяцев назад
Hey Konstantin - Wholehearted thanks for your content. It lifts me up when I’m feeling blue.
@KonstantinBaumMasterofWine
@KonstantinBaumMasterofWine 11 месяцев назад
Glad to hear it!
@Itsmyface
@Itsmyface 2 года назад
Lord of the rings is amazing so not judging you for watching it for fourteen times.
@bodhisatva1975
@bodhisatva1975 2 года назад
Love this and all your videos!! I definitely learn a lot being an amateur wine lover! Please keep the video coming!!
@Cromatt11
@Cromatt11 2 года назад
Australia episode please! We are more than just Barossa Shiraz!!! Clare valley Riesling (Grosset polish hill), Margaret River Chardonnay (Leeuwin Estate art series) and Cabernet (Cullen dianna madeline), Mclaren Vale Grenache (Yangarra) and Yarra Valley Pinot ( Mount Mary) all amazing
@atamo4323
@atamo4323 2 года назад
Try some Penfolds that are made in different countries (to circumvent import duty maybe?) to see if there’s any terroir and quality difference.
@hxl6162
@hxl6162 2 года назад
Thank you so much for the fantastic content best wishes from Brazil 🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷
@RCTricking
@RCTricking 2 года назад
Another banger
@andrewpaterson6525
@andrewpaterson6525 2 года назад
It’s interesting that you mentioned screwtop vs cork for one of the comparisons. It looks like another pair could be distinguished by the same feature. So to blind, might want to use the same bottle type for both
@marilynbeardslee2163
@marilynbeardslee2163 2 года назад
Quite an interesting tasting. I had a Malbec while visiting Cahors a number of years ago, and found it a bit too tannic for my taste. I obviously need to revisit - at least the wine if not the place.
@AllMyHobbies
@AllMyHobbies 10 месяцев назад
I think putting them in all the same bottles would make all your blind tests a lot more fair. seeing screw top or bottle shape and weight have big influences
@clydeblair9622
@clydeblair9622 2 года назад
We carry the Samur Clos de Midi chenin. I'm laughing, Cahors isn't for the faint of heart.
@SteelyTheVan
@SteelyTheVan 2 года назад
Another excellent video! I had thought that you would have been at 100K by next year sometime, I think you may be hitting that a bit sooner - and well deserved it is as your channel is easily the most informative and enjoyable one out there! I have been more and more impressed by the new world Bordeaux style blends coming out of Washington State. Although the old world styles are quite compelling, the cost of enjoying them is really becoming off putting as compared with other regions. So if you have not yet done a comparison of old world and new world Bordeaux blends, that may be interesting.
@yawawuku6085
@yawawuku6085 Год назад
Obviously you have eben shopping in my favorite onlineshop 😂 Really loved to hear your opinion on those wines!
@comradesomo
@comradesomo 2 года назад
Interesting choice of wines! Australia is not overly known for its grenache, at least compared with other red varietals like shiraz, cabernet, or pinot, and when grenache is used it is mostly in southern Rhone style GSM blends. Peter Lehmann is a producer famed for his shiraz, with that grenache coming in at a very reasonable price here of about $20AUD or €14. If you can find it, some of the very best Australian grenache is made by Cirillo, the grapes for which are grown from possibly the oldest surviving grenache vines in the world, dating back to 1848.
@1949cr
@1949cr Год назад
Hey that was a best kept secret. Old vine Grenache is amazing, often showing like Pinot noir in elegance and red fruit spectrum.
@darillus1
@darillus1 2 года назад
would love to see an Australian wine taste test!
@craigmetcalfe1749
@craigmetcalfe1749 2 года назад
If you are interested in great cocktail books, may I suggest "The Drunken Botanist" by Amy Stewart. I'm a wine guy first and foremost, then a foodie, then a gardener. This book was a brilliant read about the history and botanicals on which certain spirits are based. Cheers!
@mr-vet
@mr-vet 2 года назад
Always enjoy your videos. Keep up the great work!
@andrewgeorge7568
@andrewgeorge7568 2 года назад
That was a great video, loved the LotR reference! For me it's more about the country than Old or New, I love Italian & Spanish wines, French less so, from the old and NZ, Aus & Argentina from the New, US less so. It's probably more the styles that I was first introduced to that determine my preferences. On cocktails, if you don't already have it I highly recommend the Death & Co. Cocktail book (first one not the Codex), it's the best I have though the ingredients can get complex. The best part about it is the layout, it's broken down by spirit then shaken or stirred so finding what you're feeling is easy compared to any other book, + the drinks are delicious.
@hamder
@hamder 2 года назад
You've seen LoTR 14 times... only 14!! Those are rookie numbers my friend, gotta pump those numbers up!! 😉
@dusanradovanovic2896
@dusanradovanovic2896 2 года назад
You should also try some wine from Moravia region. There are quite good Rieslings, Veltlins and Weissbungunder
@bugsygoo
@bugsygoo 2 года назад
I never thought how absurd the term 'new world' is. I wonder if the Chinese with their 6,000 years of civilization consider themselves part of the new world!
@markiangooley
@markiangooley 2 года назад
I’d consider China part of the Old World. There was trade between China and the ancient Romans, not a lot but the two civilizations had at least a little knowledge of each other.
@dank2966
@dank2966 2 года назад
100% with you here. Colonizer language. just because we use these terms for many years doesn't mean we can't change it and be more inclusive.
@Masterbeing
@Masterbeing 2 года назад
This is such a good video idea!!
@jamesallison4875
@jamesallison4875 Год назад
You are so easy to watch. Thanks guy.
@onetopcookie
@onetopcookie 5 месяцев назад
Old World with food and New World to socialise with or just chilling in front of the TV... Not a rigid choice by any means, but my go to generalisation...
@Tkremers
@Tkremers 2 года назад
i was in the saumur region last weeks for vacation. pretty good wines 😀
@rafx2014
@rafx2014 2 года назад
Quite the curveball was thrown at you with those Malbecs. Greetings from 🇦🇷
@TRR11
@TRR11 Год назад
Hey Konstantin, great video! Would love to see a video about wines from Chile! I think there's pretty much beautiful wines. Cheers 🍷
@fredericperrin3279
@fredericperrin3279 2 года назад
Fantastic tasting! Outstanding at picking the grapes. To me, old vs new is increasingly more about wine making philosophy than geographical areas. California remains firmly new world but many producers trying to be more old world. New York (Long Island) is very old world in my opinion (very small producers, very focused on terroir, fairly high acidity, not excessive oak). South West of France generally very old world (apparently except this Cahors), while the Languedoc Roussillon is quite new world in style. I find that a lot of Spanish reds are pretty new world in fact. Same for Chile and Australia, while I find Argentina mostly old world (probably best value for money at the moment). Italy is very firmly in the old world in almost every area.
@reibelswinelist
@reibelswinelist Год назад
Great video as always! Just got to the Americas in WSET3 this week so fit my study schedule perfect! Thanks 🙏
@johns2262
@johns2262 2 года назад
Generally I prefer Old World, but I try way more Old Worlds wines than New World, just because they are more available here.
@javierel22
@javierel22 2 года назад
Colomé wines are fantastic, very interesting blind tasting, cheers from Argentina!
@TobySmart-lt7vs
@TobySmart-lt7vs Год назад
Love your videos - great knowledge and very entertaining!
@leebartlett6283
@leebartlett6283 2 года назад
I finally found Lambrusco, in sainsburys. The tastiest wine I’ve had for a while.
@ricknelsteel
@ricknelsteel Год назад
Very entertaining, interesting to see the two worlds moving in different directions and sometimes swopping styles. I’m glad that Australia has finally stopped the over the top showy wines and gone back to a more table wine style.
@emilioazevedo
@emilioazevedo Год назад
Great reviews as always! I really enjoy your wine channel! Quick question: after open 8 bottles at once, what you do? You drink them all afterwords, give it away, throw all away? What you do? I’m dying to know!!!!! 😊 Thanks
@vallamb9499
@vallamb9499 Год назад
Great video! I am currently loving anything from the Willamette Valley in Oregon both white and reds. I would love to see you do a video on that region.
@johnstevenson8418
@johnstevenson8418 2 года назад
Great idea to compare new versus old, maybe try old versus new
@gogreenmsu03
@gogreenmsu03 2 года назад
I tend to gravitate slightly more to old world regions, although being in the US I have more new world than old world bottles. Or perhaps it’s because my wife prefers new world!
@_symmetry_
@_symmetry_ Год назад
I will be totally honest here, our two most favorite regions are Bordeaux and Tuscany. Cannot be more classic than that they say but that the truth. The two sub-regions where we have never ever been disappointed are St-Émilion and Montalcino. Very different grape varieties (mostly Merlot + Cab S & Cab F vs Sangiovese 100%) but the stability of the quality from these appellations is so amazing it's just unbelievably record breaking. They really know what they are doing in these regions... Well, all that said of course we are extremely opened to discoveries and we keep our wine tastings around 15-20% oriented towards Bordeaux and Tuscany, however our olfaction/palate has been admittedly more satisfied by old world over the last 15-20 years. 25 years ago we drank almost exclusively new world wines mostly from the US because we were lacking experience and we were having this sweet tooth syndrome with red wines. My parents, who were already very experienced and passionate people with wine, were (not condescendingly) laughing at us and were always telling us that we would laugh at ourselves a couple of decades in the future. And just as clockwork, here we are. We now understand, but at the same time we kind of feel bad about how we now look at the new world wines, we know it's not fair and we try really hard to forget the fact it's almost stronger than us to feel this way. It's almost like a pre-loaded judgment that we can't escape... I know it's definitely not okay but as a salvation motive I should point out that we still feel humble and very little in the wine world despite having tasted probably hundreds of thousands of wines, but we almost feel like humble teenagers who played piano for only a decade, and we were able to laugh at ourselves and evolve a lot, so much so that my parents recently decided to give us their 97K$ cellar composed of 60% Burgundy wines that we are definitely not connoisseur enough to even hope understanding what's going on with something like a RC La Tâche at 4K$ a bottle (there are three good to great vintages in there). This is a gift that will keep on giving I'm sure. And this was probably a way for my parents to let us know that we should stay humble, even after having many Mouton, Haut-Brion, Yquem, etc. verticals, that we were so proud to say we had this experience. Before they died, they told me they could open a Sassicaia 1985 and taste the whole thing in silence, with just visual cues to be at the same place. That's exactly where I want to be before I die.
@kevinboisard582
@kevinboisard582 2 года назад
Excellent video.
@wallacegrommet9343
@wallacegrommet9343 Год назад
Argentina is cranking out so much gritty, acidic, and sharp Malbec these days.
@itsmederek1
@itsmederek1 2 года назад
Columba produces the highest altitude wines in the world and they are very high acid and tannic. Leon messed you up because he knew you would look for the Mendoza and it wouldn't be there putting you into Cahor which is very plush compared to High altitude Salta Malbec.
@IgorLinkov
@IgorLinkov 2 года назад
Hi Konstantin, Interesting tasting! The scores between 5 and 6 little bit unclear. There is a huge difference between 90 and 84 points. For my opinion the Grenache from Spain couldn’t be rated as “well done wine” with rate 84.
@neocore_2515
@neocore_2515 2 года назад
Awesome stuff as always! Would love to see New York State Finger Lake Rieslings go up against some German ones!
@urizen7613
@urizen7613 2 года назад
I once attended a tasting of rieslings, gewurz and pinot gris from the US, Italy and Nelson, New Zealand. Absolutely epic. If I recall correctly, some of the US rieslings were from the Finger Lakes.
@topgeir7455
@topgeir7455 2 года назад
I tend to drink more new world for everyday consumption, and old world for special occasions 😀
@Rudy0stefmeister
@Rudy0stefmeister 2 года назад
I like new world reds and old world whites for the most part, but some grape varieties can't be perfectly replicated in the new world. I have yet to have a new world sangiovese or nebbiolo that even approaches Chianti or Langhe quality
@colinbrigham8253
@colinbrigham8253 Год назад
Thank you 😊
@georgek.1498
@georgek.1498 2 года назад
Depends on my mood. If I want a single variety red - new world. I stay with France for blends.
@guermeisterdoodlebug7980
@guermeisterdoodlebug7980 2 года назад
“. . . completely messed that up.” Ha! Are you aware how few of us could have even identified the variety in a true blind tasting?
@duncansalmon5718
@duncansalmon5718 2 года назад
Fun video. If you want to taste some excellent Austrian chardonnay, look for Velich (Darscho, Tiglat) or Kollwentz (GLORIA, Tatschler, Katterstein).
@luisfelipecanever9505
@luisfelipecanever9505 Год назад
Colome is a great winery and salta is making some fine wines
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