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PENNYPRINCE 1

03/20/04 11:45 AM

#220639 RE: Zeev Hed #220637

Zeev I agree I have heard the same thing and may actually follow your lead. We have been collecting favorites for a few years but by no means a large cellar. A case would be a good investment maybe after we see your top later this year and I have made a little Wine investment capital.
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Patrick Bateman

03/20/04 1:03 PM

#220667 RE: Zeev Hed #220637

Curious - how much does a bottle of the 2000 go for?

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punkle

03/21/04 3:01 PM

#220789 RE: Zeev Hed #220637

OT - 86 Mouton. Zeev, you are living VERY, VERY LARGE if you're drinking 86 Moutons on a regular basis.

Wine Advocate #106 (Aug 1996) Robert Parker 100 points Drink 2011-2096
After stumbling over some wines I thought were high class Bordeaux, I nailed this wine in one of the blind tastings for this article. In most tastings where a great Bordeaux is inserted with California Cabernets, the Bordeaux comes across as drier, more austere, and not nearly as rich and concentrated (California wines are inevitably fruitier and more massive). To put it mildly, the 1986 Mouton-Rothschild held its own (and then some), in a flight that included the Caymus Special Selection, Stag's Leap Wine Cellars Cask 23, Dunn Howell Mountain, and Joseph Phelps Eisele Vineyard. Clearly the youngest looking, most opaque and concentrated wine of the group, it tastes as if it has not budged in development since I first tasted it out of barrel in March, 1987. An enormously concentrated, massive Mouton-Rothschild, comparable in quality, but not style, to the 1982, 1959, and 1945, this impeccably made wine is still in its infancy. Interestingly, when I was in Bordeaux several years ago, I had this wine served to me blind from a magnum that had been opened and decanted 48 hours previously. Even then, it still tasted like a barrel sample! I suspect the 1986 Mouton-Rothschild requires a minimum of 15-20 more years of cellaring; it has the potential to last for 50-100 years! Given the outrageously high prices being fetched by so many of the great 1982s and 1990s (and lest I forget, the 1995 Bordeaux futures), it appears this wine might still be one of the "relative bargains" in the fine wine marketplace. I wonder how many readers will be in shape to drink it when it does finally reach full maturity?

The tasting notes for this section are from two single blind tastings, one conducted in May, 1996, in California, and the other in June, 1996, in Baltimore.