Storing Wine Barrow-in-Furness

Not all wines are suitable for longer term storage, and most red wines, and almost all whites, will not benefit from more than four years of ageing. It is difficult for a winemaker to make a bottle of wine that tastes good after only one or two years, that can also evolve into something even better a decade later.

Bargain Booze
+44 (0) 1229 838100
5 Risedale Road
Barrow-In-Furness
Bargain Booze
+44 (0) 1229 822422
18 Settle Street
Barrow-In-Furness
Bargain Booze
+44 (0) 1229 468811
86-88 Market Street
Dalton-In-Furness
Bargain Booze
+44 (0) 1229 480918
27-29 New Market Street
Ulverston
Booze Buster
+44 (0) 1524 417832
21 Regent Road
Morecambe
Batty's Off Licence
+44 (0) 1229 870081
215 Rawlinson Street
Barrow-In-Furness
Bargain Booze
+44 (0) 1229 470011
1A Amphitrite Street
Barrow-In-Furness
Bargain Booze
+44 (0) 1229 775870
29 Wellington Street
Millom
Booze Buster
+44 (0) 1524 852355
368 Heysham Road
Morecambe
Bargain Booze
+44 (0) 1524 832816
233 Westminster Road
Morecambe
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Storing Wine

Storing Wine

Not all wines are suitable for longer term storage, and most red wines, and almost all whites, will not benefit from more than four years of ageing. It is difficult for a winemaker to make a bottle of wine that tastes good after only one or two years, that can also evolve into something even better a decade later. In fact, few wines are produced with the intent that they will be drunk much more than ten months later, never mind ten years later. Everyday wines simply taste more and more stale, faded and dull as the aging process goes on.

However, some wines are made in such a way that they will be unapproachable for a decade. Most of these wines are red, and the majority of the ageing process involves the relationship between fruitiness and tannin. The wines will evolve in the bottle; their tannins will soften and their acid will mellow. Red wines will grow paler and develop sediment; whilst ageworthy whites will darken to a rich, nutty amber.

In this section, you'll be able to find out about the types of wine that are suitable for storing - and the ones that should be drunk without delay. There's also a look at the conditions that are required to keep wines in good condition whilst they are maturing. If by any chance you have any wine left undrunk at the end of the bottle, you'll want to be aware of the best ways to keep it so that it doesn't lose any of its flavour. In this section, you can do just that, as well as learning about the sorts of wine that will keep the best when opened.

Storing Red Wine
Storing White Wine
Wine Storage Conditions
Storing Leftover Wine
Just how long can you keep an opened bottle of wine for?

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