@sheagiesler usually no. It sometimes have the most distinct notes at the start, tart, some sweet and acid, hints of the florals etc. But it quickly dies out and tastes of muddy water.
What about anything that she said is wrong? Most wines that old have some evaporation and aeration inside the bottle which essentially turns it into tar and if not it will taste absolutely nothing like wine….
And do you even know what a sommelier is? They most certainly know what they are talking about when it comes to wine. The test to become a master sommelier is considered one of the world’s most challenging tests….
Depends on the wine and the factors inside of it. If it has the right stuff and stored right. You can still drink past 1700 years. There is a bottle that's that old and they believe it's still good. Meaning you could literally drink it and be fine.
You said they “believe it’s still good” and still so confidently said you can drink it and be fine. 😂 do you understand what the word “believe” implies?
Uhh maybe fortified wines like Port and Madeira because the higher alcohol content helps them last, but even then, finding a 100+ year old bottle of Port is extremely rare and not a common occurrence. Regular wine like Bordeaux on the other hand absolutely cannot last 100+ years on its own, maybe under perfect conditions and even then the wine would have lost all of its fruit. Top ageable wines like Bordeaux, Burgundy, Barolo, etc. is typically consumed between 5-30 years old
No, we Europeans understand that old wine is for rich people to waste their money on because even a wine for aging in perfect conditions become a musty-tannic slop which is safe to consume but very unpleasant and the only reason you would keep wine that long is to sell it to people trying to show off. Like other people said, fortified wines can last longer, especially the very sweet and highly fortified versions like certain vintages designed to cross vast oceans by sail but even then if the temperature fluctuated out of optimum too often or it got hot at any point in its life it would be ruined. Most wine, even the stuff that stands aging, really is generally at its best between 3-7 years with some like Barolo being 5-10
Fortified wines like Port and Madeira can last for a long time like 100+ years but DEFINITELY not 500 years lmao. And that’s for fortified wines with high alcohol contents from mixing spirit into the wine. A regular fermented wine like Bordeaux cannot last nearly as long. Although Bordeaux can age really well, most bottles of top Bordeaux reach their peak in about 15-25 years of age and start go degrade from oxidation when they reach 50+ years old. The wine in this video is Chateau Haut-Brion, a first growth Bordeaux which is only 1 of 5 first growths among the thousands in Bordeaux. It’s a world class elite wine that often sells for $1,000+ yet it no doubt was oxidized after 100 years. If it survived it wasn’t very good that’s for sure.
Unless a bottle is estate bottled there’s a very good chance it won’t keep for aging past a maximum point. The storage and bottling needs to be done with the intention of aging and not all wine is made an bottled equally
If it was sealed and stored right 100 years is nothing for alcohol the oldest I've ever had was from 1840 found it in the wine cellar of my great, great, great, great,great grandfather's plantation house in South Carolina my brother and I found it and drank it and it was pretty good
No definitely not. Fortified wines like Port and Madeira can last 200 years TOPS. That’s because those wines have high alcohol content that makes them closer to a liquor than wine, and that helps them last a long time. A regular wine at 10-15% alcohol like the Chateau Haut-Brion in the video most definitely cannot last 200 years. I’d even doubt that after 100 years it was still good. Great Bordeaux can age, yes, but typically reaches its peak in 10-30 years and starts to slowly degrade after that.
No, wines cannot last nearly this long lol. Ports and Madeira can last up to 100 years bc they’re fortified with spirits to make them closer to a liquor than a wine. But regular wines like the Haut-Brion in the video can age 20-40 years tops before they start to degrade. 500+ years is just flat out wrong, no wines can last that long.
Stop with the ridiculous nonsense. There are not people consuming 500+ year old wines often. And if they are they sure as shit aren’t enjoying it because it will taste and look nothing like wine.
Why would you assume that from this short clip? Nothing she said was wrong information. And if fact she is a sommelier she knows more about wine than most…
Technically it may be “safe” but a 1500 year old bottle of wine would be extremely rare to find in decent condition and even then it would have no resemblance to wine at all anymore and taste like shit. That is if it’s not tar by that point.
The amount of people so confidently stating 1000+ year old wine is “drinkable” is laughable…. It may still be liquid that old but by no means does that mean it’s drinkable or enjoyable. That is if it’s not tar by that point.
wines can be safely drank up to 1500 years old in age, beyond that is getting into dangerous territory where its uncertain like the 1650 year old wine bottle, which is absolutely horrid looking
Where is everyone getting this egregiously incorrect 1500 years factoid from? Wine cannot last *anywhere* near 1500 years. The oldest consumable wines are fortified wines like Port and Madeira that are made by mixing spirits into normal wine, and even those can last only 150-200 years tops. A regular fermented red wine cannot age for more than maybe 80 years, and that’s assuming it is a top quality ageable wine like Bordeaux. And even then, it would be best around the 10-30 year old window.
@@jacob9540I’m wondering the same thing. It’s shocking how confidently misinformed so many in this thread are. Especially by how easy it is to research this topic. To think the methods they used to seal wine with that long ago would preserve it for 1000+ years is ignorant. Even the most modern methods and technology for sealing is extremely unlikely to preserve a wine for 1000’s of years.
My god why does everyone on this comment section believe this. No, wines cannot last *anywhere* near 1500 years lmao. Wines that can endure aging like red Bordeaux can last *maybe* 60-80 years under great conditions before they spoil, and they really are best drunk at 10-30 years of age. 1500 years is just laughably incorrect.
Just because you can drink it doesn’t mean it will be good. A wine 1500 years old will have absolutely no resemblance to what we think of as wine if it’s not tar by that point.
I mean you can probably drink a 10,000 year old wine and not die, but it's probably going to be lacking in the characteristics that people traditionally drink wine for. It won't have alcohol in it or taste like grapes.
I keep seeing people say 1000 + year old wine is “drinkable” which may be true but it will in no way shape or form taste or look like wine at that point. Even the most modern methods of sealing would likely not preserve a wine for that long.
Shows how much you know lol lol there are monks that make wine but not for themselves for people severely thousand years from now, and they themselves enjoy wine from several thousand years ago.
Imma need them to wash that bottle and I mean SCRUB IT CLEAN! Ugh… that’s gross. And the fact wine look horrible. Given his reaction to smelling it… it’s putrid.
Digging near the water by the San Francisco Bay, they found a 150 year old ship with cases of champagne. They tested a bottle, excellent! All the high brows had a party and served the champagne, all salt bilge water. The test bottle was the only one that was any good. My brother in law had some wine going out of date, I forget, a Mouton Rothschild white wine, and this was late '80s, early '90s. It was impeccable. The reds were heavy with beeswing. (Sherlock Holmes reference, I believe referring to the sediment, from "The Copper Beeches.")
A wine that old probably won’t kill you but it will have absolutely no resemblance to what we think of as wine. That is if it’s not tar by that point. Even the most modern methods of sealing would likely not preserve a wine for 1500 years.
@@slikwines this comment section shows why wine professionals and Research like that done at UC Davis is so important. Keep up the effort i promise there are people that appreciate it. cheers.
And without her "professional" commentary i would have never been able to read the captions, see the state of the cork and bottle or identify the brown color of the wine. Shes such an expert 🤡
Why don’t you inform me on your extensive knowledge of wine? Do you believe a bottle of wine 1500 years old would be enjoyable and taste anything like wine like most of the other ignorant commenters here saying wine can last 1000+ years?
Loved the part where we got to hear what it tastes like.
Vinegar
@sheagiesler usually no. It sometimes have the most distinct notes at the start, tart, some sweet and acid, hints of the florals etc. But it quickly dies out and tastes of muddy water.
Man I hate these youtube-yappers. They dont have a clue about anything but feel they should speak on everything.
What about anything that she said is wrong? Most wines that old have some evaporation and aeration inside the bottle which essentially turns it into tar and if not it will taste absolutely nothing like wine….
And do you even know what a sommelier is? They most certainly know what they are talking about when it comes to wine. The test to become a master sommelier is considered one of the world’s most challenging tests….
Just because you CAN do something, doesn't mean you SHOULD.
She's literally a sommelier on tik tok
If you don’t even know what the word sommelier means you are obviously not educated enough to be judging her lmao
Depends on the wine and the factors inside of it. If it has the right stuff and stored right. You can still drink past 1700 years. There is a bottle that's that old and they believe it's still good. Meaning you could literally drink it and be fine.
That doesn't make it "good." It just means it won't kill you. You can eat literal grass and rocks, doesn't mean you should.
You said they “believe it’s still good” and still so confidently said you can drink it and be fine. 😂 do you understand what the word “believe” implies?
You can drinks Wine hundreds of years old. Europeans understand this
Fortified wines yes. Not just any wine.
Uhh maybe fortified wines like Port and Madeira because the higher alcohol content helps them last, but even then, finding a 100+ year old bottle of Port is extremely rare and not a common occurrence.
Regular wine like Bordeaux on the other hand absolutely cannot last 100+ years on its own, maybe under perfect conditions and even then the wine would have lost all of its fruit. Top ageable wines like Bordeaux, Burgundy, Barolo, etc. is typically consumed between 5-30 years old
No, we Europeans understand that old wine is for rich people to waste their money on because even a wine for aging in perfect conditions become a musty-tannic slop which is safe to consume but very unpleasant and the only reason you would keep wine that long is to sell it to people trying to show off.
Like other people said, fortified wines can last longer, especially the very sweet and highly fortified versions like certain vintages designed to cross vast oceans by sail but even then if the temperature fluctuated out of optimum too often or it got hot at any point in its life it would be ruined.
Most wine, even the stuff that stands aging, really is generally at its best between 3-7 years with some like Barolo being 5-10
@@jacob9540 damn.. that ends that.
I'm American, and I make my own wine.
My sparkling blackberry wine is the best 👌
Lmao What kind of ridiculous people are on here saying that people are drinking thousand year old wines?!
Yeah she must have gotten mixed up between 100 and 1000 😂 people drink 500 yearold wine all the time...
Or she just knows literally nothing 😂
No they don't do that all the time. There aren't but a handful in the world.
Fortified wines like Port and Madeira can last for a long time like 100+ years but DEFINITELY not 500 years lmao. And that’s for fortified wines with high alcohol contents from mixing spirit into the wine.
A regular fermented wine like Bordeaux cannot last nearly as long. Although Bordeaux can age really well, most bottles of top Bordeaux reach their peak in about 15-25 years of age and start go degrade from oxidation when they reach 50+ years old.
The wine in this video is Chateau Haut-Brion, a first growth Bordeaux which is only 1 of 5 first growths among the thousands in Bordeaux. It’s a world class elite wine that often sells for $1,000+ yet it no doubt was oxidized after 100 years. If it survived it wasn’t very good that’s for sure.
@@chrispyy99No sommelier knows what they’re talking about it’s all a bullshit job
Unless a bottle is estate bottled there’s a very good chance it won’t keep for aging past a maximum point. The storage and bottling needs to be done with the intention of aging and not all wine is made an bottled equally
i’d love to see any of these comments calling her wrong’s face after sipping a ‘500’ year old wine
If it was sealed and stored right 100 years is nothing for alcohol the oldest I've ever had was from 1840 found it in the wine cellar of my great, great, great, great,great grandfather's plantation house in South Carolina my brother and I found it and drank it and it was pretty good
@@chadklaren9537 damn your family owned slaves? thats so sick
@@chadklaren9537Me when I lie
What we have here is a 1926 rancid Bordeaux. Who will start bidding at 250,000. Ah we 250 will we see 3?
Most aggressive lip lick I've ever seen in my life.
Math skills on fleek
I'm afraid of glass fragments 😮
Don’t be scared bb
It’s filtered before consumption
@@slikwineswine can last up to a thousand years if sealed properly
@@princeprince9227tbf glas can powder at this point you’d need a coffee filter paper lol
@@princeprince9227*supposed to be
It has a brown colour because of the age it’s totally normal
Wine is good up to 1500 years depending on how it’s been preserved.
No the fuck it's not 🤣 it wouldn't even be wine anymore
That's just not true
@@TxRxIxPyes it is believe it or not don’t tell someone they’re wrong when u yourself no nothing about the subject
Depends on how it's sealed....
No definitely not. Fortified wines like Port and Madeira can last 200 years TOPS. That’s because those wines have high alcohol content that makes them closer to a liquor than wine, and that helps them last a long time.
A regular wine at 10-15% alcohol like the Chateau Haut-Brion in the video most definitely cannot last 200 years. I’d even doubt that after 100 years it was still good. Great Bordeaux can age, yes, but typically reaches its peak in 10-30 years and starts to slowly degrade after that.
An American teaching Europeans is hilarious 😂😂
average american lol, ive drank wone from the 17th and 18th century and im perfectly fine
"I've drank wone"
Clearly.
And she didn't say this would kill you. You can drink pee from a public toilet and be perfectly fine.
Man tell me why i thought it looked like cognac or brandy 😂😂
Wine can stay good for up to 1500 years
Moral of the story enjoy what you have while you have it nothing last forever
Be walkin around like layhey after that bad boy 😅🥴🥴🥴
I'd be surprised if Jesus had a swing of that
You can drink wine much older than this, 500+ year old wines are consumed often.
Nope they are not
No, wines cannot last nearly this long lol. Ports and Madeira can last up to 100 years bc they’re fortified with spirits to make them closer to a liquor than a wine. But regular wines like the Haut-Brion in the video can age 20-40 years tops before they start to degrade. 500+ years is just flat out wrong, no wines can last that long.
Stop with the ridiculous nonsense. There are not people consuming 500+ year old wines often. And if they are they sure as shit aren’t enjoying it because it will taste and look nothing like wine.
I really don’t think she knows anything about wine 😂
Why would you assume that from this short clip? Nothing she said was wrong information. And if fact she is a sommelier she knows more about wine than most…
1500 years is safe
Technically it may be “safe” but a 1500 year old bottle of wine would be extremely rare to find in decent condition and even then it would have no resemblance to wine at all anymore and taste like shit. That is if it’s not tar by that point.
The amount of people so confidently stating 1000+ year old wine is “drinkable” is laughable…. It may still be liquid that old but by no means does that mean it’s drinkable or enjoyable. That is if it’s not tar by that point.
wines can be safely drank up to 1500 years old in age, beyond that is getting into dangerous territory where its uncertain like the 1650 year old wine bottle, which is absolutely horrid looking
They had glass 1000 years ago this video is a Chinese novelty thing. The company that makes them started in 2013
Where is everyone getting this egregiously incorrect 1500 years factoid from? Wine cannot last *anywhere* near 1500 years. The oldest consumable wines are fortified wines like Port and Madeira that are made by mixing spirits into normal wine, and even those can last only 150-200 years tops. A regular fermented red wine cannot age for more than maybe 80 years, and that’s assuming it is a top quality ageable wine like Bordeaux. And even then, it would be best around the 10-30 year old window.
@@jacob9540I’m wondering the same thing. It’s shocking how confidently misinformed so many in this thread are. Especially by how easy it is to research this topic. To think the methods they used to seal wine with that long ago would preserve it for 1000+ years is ignorant. Even the most modern methods and technology for sealing is extremely unlikely to preserve a wine for 1000’s of years.
If you have to cut the neck of the bottle.. I don't want the wine..
You can drink wine from up to 1500 years old.
Except we've never done it.
My god why does everyone on this comment section believe this. No, wines cannot last *anywhere* near 1500 years lmao. Wines that can endure aging like red Bordeaux can last *maybe* 60-80 years under great conditions before they spoil, and they really are best drunk at 10-30 years of age. 1500 years is just laughably incorrect.
Just because you can drink it doesn’t mean it will be good. A wine 1500 years old will have absolutely no resemblance to what we think of as wine if it’s not tar by that point.
Looks like I could put that in my engine
Almost 100 ..
This is what happens when you leave your phone
There's people drinking old wines found in archaeological sites never mind the guy that made whooly mammoth meat balls.
I mean you can probably drink a 10,000 year old wine and not die, but it's probably going to be lacking in the characteristics that people traditionally drink wine for. It won't have alcohol in it or taste like grapes.
100 years is by no means even close to too old she doesnt know what she is talking about. Even 2000 year old wine is drinkable.
I keep seeing people say 1000 + year old wine is “drinkable” which may be true but it will in no way shape or form taste or look like wine at that point. Even the most modern methods of sealing would likely not preserve a wine for that long.
Shows how much you know lol lol there are monks that make wine but not for themselves for people severely thousand years from now, and they themselves enjoy wine from several thousand years ago.
That’s just completely false information…. No one would “enjoy” a wine thousands of years old….
I’d rather drink 100 bottles of wine a year.
I’d also rather have a bottle in front of me than a frontal lobotomy.
She hasn't a clue. There's drinkable alcohol that's hundreds of years old
And the funny part is to most people a $5 bottle of wine from Walgreens would probably taste better.
Waiter-“sir how would you like your wine?”
Customer-“Forgotten”
Waiter- “AD or BC?”
😂😂😂😂
His face said balsamic
Yeah, I'm not gonna trust somebody who looks like the female Napoleon Dynamite
Oh god I bet she’s from austin too.
vinaigrette!!
Crazy all the folks in the comments telling a sommelier about wine 😂
100 years isn’t close to the oldest
I know its old but the bottle can be cleaned though
I loved the part when you reacted to it
I would say that's a reaction in my book. Commentating on the cork and wine on how it looks. It's not like she can taste it herself.
I would say that's a reaction in my book. Commentating on how the cork and wine looks, it's not like she can taste it herself.
Yall Americans haven't been around that long but wine can last longer
Americas been around for like 200 something years, brains for shit
Imma need them to wash that bottle and I mean SCRUB IT CLEAN!
Ugh… that’s gross.
And the fact wine look horrible. Given his reaction to smelling it… it’s putrid.
It is fake
Vinegar then
Ever tried Baby Duck?
No one is talking about the glass falling inside the bottle
That's why he pours it through a strainer into the glass.
They could at least wipe the bottle before serving it.
Do you know it smells like paint?
They can last 1000 years
Vinegar
i went on a date with a sommelier once. she got trashed on JD and couldnt support her own weight 💀
That because she understand what drinking is for
Like those newest comments
Sorry to the rest of the world as an American we don’t claim her
kewl story bro
Speak for yourself… I guarantee she knows more about wine than you know about taking a shit….
Mmmmm vinegar!!
No offence. Don't really need a Sommelier for that one.
Digging near the water by the San Francisco Bay, they found a 150 year old ship with cases of champagne. They tested a bottle, excellent! All the high brows had a party and served the champagne, all salt bilge water. The test bottle was the only one that was any good.
My brother in law had some wine going out of date, I forget, a Mouton Rothschild white wine, and this was late '80s, early '90s. It was impeccable. The reds were heavy with beeswing. (Sherlock Holmes reference, I believe referring to the sediment, from "The Copper Beeches.")
Pretty sure the fermentation capacity for wine is 1500 years, meaning you can drink any wine younger than 1500 years old
Sure you can drink it. Would it be nice though
A wine that old probably won’t kill you but it will have absolutely no resemblance to what we think of as wine. That is if it’s not tar by that point. Even the most modern methods of sealing would likely not preserve a wine for 1500 years.
1826-2024 almost a hundred
1926 can you read?
Sham
Shame it’s not whiskey
Skeleton of wine is left, no fruit
2 words… American female
I’m American and I 1000% agree with you bro.
Which one?
@@Misa-Aname😂
If she’s in fact a sommelier then her being American or female has absolutely nothing to do with anything…..
Only way i got thought this video was muting her. Id rather hear nails on a chalkboard
If only there was some way you didn’t have to watch it??
@@slikwines this comment section shows why wine professionals and Research like that done at UC Davis is so important. Keep up the effort i promise there are people that appreciate it. cheers.
It taste and smells like it looks trust me it’s not nice at all
Yea it looks corked
Its corked
In this video + comment section: nobody knows anything about anything related to this pointless video
You know nothing about wine
Chick has no idea but thinks shes the pro. Women☕️🤡
she actually is correct
And without her "professional" commentary i would have never been able to read the captions, see the state of the cork and bottle or identify the brown color of the wine. Shes such an expert 🤡
@@waveriderptgood for you… you chose to watch and make an ignorant comment.👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
A sommelier that doesn’t know wine. You must be so good at your job 😂😂
Sommeliers are all a scam. They can't tell cheap wine from expensive wine.
They definitely enjoyed themselves a glass of vinegar
wine can laste up to more than 1000 years so you are wrong there
No, you are wrong. Wine cannot last anywhere near 1000 years lmao.
Being so confident in being wrong is wild….. also are you blind? Did that dark brown color of the “wine” look enjoyable to you?
What a “sommelier” you are… part of the job description is “wine TASTING” not “wine whining/wine yapping”
That's red wine vinigger at this point
That is incorrect. Just poor tasting wine.
@@triskits_mmm you're incorrect. It's vinigger.
Yeah she doesn’t know much about wine
Why don’t you inform me on your extensive knowledge of wine? Do you believe a bottle of wine 1500 years old would be enjoyable and taste anything like wine like most of the other ignorant commenters here saying wine can last 1000+ years?