My first contribution is The Rubens in London.
Fonseca Bin 27 - £59 per bottle
Taylor's LBV 2000 - £68 per bottle
Taylor's 10 yr old - £79 per bottle
Dow's 1997 VP - £95 per bottle

Derek
I just happened to be in a hotel when I thought up the title - happy for it to extend to anywhere with a wine listjdaw1 wrote: Good thread idea, which might slightly extend to bars.
Alan, I would have asked them to open a fresh bottle for me...since it "Doesn't effect it" anyways8┚¬ or £5.50 for a glass of 94 Niepoort. Staff no idea when it was opened, because as they pointed out 'it doesn't effect it' Rolling Eyes
That doesn't sound too bad.AHB wrote:This is a restaurant now established in the old bottling factory of the Sandeman company in London.
Prices are per bottle
Sandeman 1970 £150
Graham 1960 £185
The prices may not sound too bad until you put them into the context of the UK retail market - Sandeman 1970 can be purchased retail for £40 and Graham 1960 for £71. Paying £110 for the privilege of drinking one of these wines in that particular restaurant was just more than we felt we could justify - especially when the Crusting Pipe in Covent Garden were able to provide us with the bottle of Grahams 1983 for £46 and the bottle of Skeffington 1994 for £30 (and a bottle of Taylor 1963 for £146 that we didn't open and I took home!).mosesbotbol wrote:That doesn't sound too bad.AHB wrote:This is a restaurant now established in the old bottling factory of the Sandeman company in London.
Prices are per bottle
Sandeman 1970 £150
Graham 1960 £185
I take it that these were the bottle prices rather than being served by the glass!jdaw1 wrote:Jean Georges, in the Trump International Hotel & Tower:
1950 Cockburn $900
1912 Croft $2000
1996 Bomfim $96
1963 Fonseca $950
1908 Gilbey $1200
1966 Graham $600
1963 Graham $1000
1955 Graham $1500
1987 Nacional $800
1975 Nacional $1050
1985 Taylor $256
1970 Taylor $600
1955 Taylor $1500
1948 Taylor $2200
1945 Taylor $2900
1935 Taylor $2700
1927 Taylor $3500
1922 Warre $1600
1927 Warre $1600
Also, if you’re treating me:
1921 d’Yquem $25k
1871 d’Yquem $20k
Yes, I believe so.AHB wrote:I take it that these were the bottle prices rather than being served by the glass!
Exactly what I thought as I decided, upon considered reflection, not to order a bottle of port. And I did tell the (very nice) sommelier that the port list was excellent and “fully valued†. He didn’t disagree.AHB wrote:Great list, if frighteningly expensive.
Luke 10:7, actually.Overtired and emotional wrote:Taking as my text for the day, that the labourer is worthy of his hire (St Mark, I think)
I know what you mean, but I think I'd have still been tempted.RonnieRoots wrote:At £18.50 per glass, I was tempted to order a glass of Warre's 1977 Vintage Port in the Vintage Wine Bar in Dubai last weekend. Not cheap of course, but not overly expensive for Middle Eastern standards either. But I was clever enough to ask how long the bottle has been open.
"Oh, only about a month sir."
We ordered a lovely bottle of Crozes-Hermitage instead.
Worth turning up and having it with poppadumsDerek T. wrote:Quilon Indian restaurant in Buckingham Gate, London have Otima 20 yr old on the menu at £26 a bottle. Not bad considering 2 starters and 2 curries cost £108![]()
Worth a visit if you are on expenses![]()
Derek
...only if you want to spend £5 on one poppadum and another £5 on each of the accompanymentsKillerB wrote:Worth turning up and having it with poppadumsDerek T. wrote:Quilon Indian restaurant in Buckingham Gate, London have Otima 20 yr old on the menu at £26 a bottle. Not bad considering 2 starters and 2 curries cost £108![]()
Worth a visit if you are on expenses![]()
Derek
What happens on tour stays on tourADV wrote:as of a couple of weks ago, I am no longer allowed to drink in hotel lobbies...well at least one particular hotel lobby. I will say no more, the statute of limitations has not expired yet![]()
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I now have a vested interest. Have you tried this yet? (20th June refers!)Derek T. wrote:Not a hotel, restaurant or bar but I thought this would amuse some of you here.
I visited a wine merchant in Edinburgh today to see what ports they had in stock. They had 4 different bottles on the shelf...
Taylor's Finest Ruby
Taylor's Finest Tawny
Taylor's Chip Dry White
Fonseca Unfiltered LBV 2000
As you might guess I was attracted to the Fonseca as I haven't seen their LBV for sale in the UK previously. At £12.95 a bottle I thought it was reasonable value, especially compared to the £9.95 price tag on the basic Taylor's Ruby and the Tawny![]()
However, I did feel the need to point out to the store manager that, at £24.95, the Chip Dry was just slightly over-priced![]()
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I will report on the Fonseca another day.
Derek
Well it didn't happen on the tour, it was here in my home state...and yes I will tell you later over a bottle or three of PortDerek T. wrote:What happens on tour stays on tourADV wrote:as of a couple of weks ago, I am no longer allowed to drink in hotel lobbies...well at least one particular hotel lobby. I will say no more, the statute of limitations has not expired yet![]()
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Derek
PS: You are going to tell me in October, aren't you?