Big C_Cal;842508215 said:
I like wine okay, but I think I'm in my "post-connoisseur" phase. I drink the Trader Joe's reds from France that average maybe $6 a bottle. They're about 13-13.5 % alcohol. To me, they seem fine for everyday. Can't see spending a lot more than that on an everyday wine, it just seems like a waste, or conspicuous consumption. Anybody think an average, educated French person spends a lot of euros on everyday wines? They do not. That's good enough for me.
At a dinner party recently, guys were all twirling around their wine glasses and talking like they knew wines. Maybe they do, maybe they don't, but they bored the crap out of me.
I know nobody on this board reads the Chronicle because it sucks, but did anybody happen to see the recent article in a "Bay Area daily" about rich, young techies that are taking classes/tests to get sommelier designations? One of the clowns was quoted as saying something like it gives him a certain gravitas in social/cultural settings... he wears the sommelier pin sometimes. I'm thinking of my next novel (which will also be my first), something like "Desperately Seeking Gravitas".
I drank some of Trader Joe's low cost French reds a few years ago and thought some were good and others not so good. I just wore out the ones I likes and moved on. Thanks for your comments, it may be a good time to go back and see what they have on the shelves now. Interesting thing about some low cost French and Italian reds is that while they may be rough the first day you open them, put the cork back in and let them sit on the counter for one or two more days and try them again. Some of them really improve, you don't think you are drinking the same wine that you opened, the difference is so great. Still, I have a hunch europe's best wine bargains stay in europe. I think we get a lot of europe's overproduction which leads to a lot of hit and miss results. I may be wrong.
I also like your comments about the techies and wine "education" or whatever it was that was taking place. I saw that article and declined to read it after looking at the pictures. I operate on one premise: "If it doesn't taste good, even after three days airing, don't buy it again." Wine snobbery is for the desperate. Do they plan to leave the price sticker on it? I think it is all about name dropping. I once tried a bottle of cabernet at $125 just to see if it was four or five times as good as what I was drinking. It was a good wine, but not four or five times as good, not even close. Let me know when you publish that book.