Correct. it's certainly not alive, but it does have beautiful plumage
Alessi's Parrot corkscrew, in blue:
Alex Bridgeman wrote: ↑19:43 Sun 14 Dec 2025You asked which you should open and were given the obvious answer and told to open both.
Do either you really believe that would have been my first time?
Threesome?jdaw1 wrote:On Friday I did a very Port thing, that multiple others have done multiple times, but it was my first time. Vintages 1996 and 1997.
What did I do?
Halves. {Quietly chokes.} I do not know what to say to this guess.winesecretary wrote: ↑09:19 Mon 15 Dec 2025You had exploding corks on two halves, one from each year?
Would not be first time.
This is a family show. If others have done it multiple times, well, this isn’t Mormon Wives, instead these things can be left unsaid.
Well, there was.
I did. What joy to find within the cardboard the clean wooden boxes, and within them not only six bottles, but the bin label too. Glenn’s question.
Not quite this, and anyway Glenn was quicker.
No.
For what purpose?
Vesuvio 6-packs are a joy to open. I always ask to have them sent, except for 1994 because if I'd asked for all of those I'd have filled my study.
Sadly, no. 1900 is older than my oldest Colheita. And if I go by the origin of the name, then my oldest Colheita is not from a Portuguese house.
That would be the D'Oliveiras 1875 Malvasia Family Reserve. I just purchased 4 more bottles of that, but it is not my oldest.Alex Bridgeman wrote: ↑08:33 Wed 17 Dec 2025 Oldest colheita: Kopke 1937
But you’ve written about old Madeira that you have a glass of every birthday. Now where is that post…