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	<title>The Wine Cellar Blog&#187; Wine Cellar</title>
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		<item>
		<title>The Wine Cellars at Corsham &#8211; A Literal Liquid Gold Mine</title>
		<link>http://www.modern-wine-cellar.com/blog/the-wine-cellars-at-corsham-a-literal-liquid-gold-mine/</link>
		<comments>http://www.modern-wine-cellar.com/blog/the-wine-cellars-at-corsham-a-literal-liquid-gold-mine/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 20 May 2010 19:37:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Wine Cellar]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bordeaux]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bordeaux Wine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[corsham]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Wiltshire]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[wine cellars]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[wine storage]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[wine vault]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.modern-wine-cellar.com/blog/the-wine-cellars-at-corsham-a-literal-liquid-gold-mine/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Forget about wine cellar equipment for their McMansions, the super rich have an underground wine vault 100ft under the Wiltshire countryside in Southern England. Formerly Eastlays mine, a source of honey-colored Bath stone, it is now Octavian Vaults's Corsham Cellars, the place where the rich and famous hoard their most precious bottles of Petrus, Lafite [...]]]></description>
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<td><img style="max-width: 800px;" src="http://www.modern-wine-cellar.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2010/05/corsham-cellars-heritage.jpg" alt="" /></td>
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Forget about <a class="ld_link" href="http://www.modern-wine-cellar.com" target=" " title="wine cellar equipment">wine cellar equipment</a> for their McMansions, the super rich have an underground wine vault 100ft under the Wiltshire countryside in Southern England. Formerly Eastlays mine, a source of honey-colored Bath stone, it is now Octavian Vaults's Corsham Cellars, the place where the rich and famous hoard their most precious bottles of Petrus, Lafite or Latour. It's like a bank storing liquid gold and run by one of the world’s relatively few specialist <a class="ld_link" href="http://www.modern-wine-cellar.com/wine-storage.html" target=" " title="wine storage">wine storage</a> companies. Octavian Vaults is the only place you can get a "Certificate of Pristine Storage".

<span id="more-405"></span>

Documented wine storage conditions along with provenance is vital to maintaining a wine's value. A wine known to have crossed the Atlantic twice is likely to raise a much lower price at auction than one that has moved only once in its life, from chateau to a reliably cool wine storage facility. Other than the trip to Corsham itself, many of the wines at Corsham Cellars have moved only a few yards between different owners’ stacks in the wine vault, either through sales at auction, via merchants, or from one customer to another.

<img style="max-width: 800px;" src="http://www.modern-wine-cellar.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2010/05/corsham-cellars-stock.jpg" alt="" />

The caverns are 100 ft underground resulting in a constant temperature of about 13.5 deg C/56.3 deg F. They can be reached only by two heavily guarded, half-mile shafts, one of them serviced by a small, lumbering hydraulic-powered train that transports wine in and eventually out of the cellars. Many clients like to visit their wine to check its condition. They have to walk down 157 steps, carrying an emergency underground kit (i.e. gas mask and flashlight since the property is still officially classified as a mine) to get to the heart of the cellar. They can inspect the security measures if they choose, including motion-sensor beams used to protect bank vaults.

As buyers become more and more concerned about authenticity and the precise fill level in bottles before a sale (the lower it is the warmer the wine has probably been kept), or if they simply don't care for a trip to Wiltshire to check on their investment, there are three photographic studios underground so that high-quality pictures of the wine can be taken at any time and sent to the client's desktop. And should they have a special occasion to celebrate, customers can ask for a crate or even single bottle to be sent anywhere in the world to impress their guests.

Corsham Cellars already stores around 5 million bottles of fine wine, some worth thousands of dollars each. It's the size of 20 football fields with tons of room for expansion. That's good because with 2009 Bordeaux promising to be a particularly excellent vintage and lucrative markets booming in Asia, they'll need it.
<div style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt;"><span style="font-size: x-small;"><span style="font-family: verdana;"> </span></span></div>
<span style="font-size: x-small;">AXVKXDKFHZGG </span></br>
</br>
This is a post from: <a href="http://www.modern-wine-cellar.com/blog/">The Wine Cellar Blog</a>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Winter Games 2010: Snow, Sabrage and Salmanazars</title>
		<link>http://www.modern-wine-cellar.com/blog/winter-games-2010-sabrage-salmanazar/</link>
		<comments>http://www.modern-wine-cellar.com/blog/winter-games-2010-sabrage-salmanazar/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 22 Feb 2010 20:42:04 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Champagne]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Moet and Chandon]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Andre Saint-Jacques]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.modern-wine-cellar.com/blog/?p=305</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[On top of the immensity of the Olympic Winter Games, it appears the Canadians are planning an after party of equally biblical proportions. Thanks to Andre Saint-Jacques, owner of the Bearfoot Bistro and its extravagant underground wine cellar of more than 20,000 bottles (a perennial winner of the Wine Spectator’s Award of Excellence), the Champagne [...]]]></description>
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<td><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-315" title="Andre St. Jacques in Bearfoot Bistro's Wine Cellar" src="http://www.modern-wine-cellar.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/Andre_StJacques_54.gif" alt="Andre St. Jacques, Bearfoot Bistro, Wine Cellar, Sabrage" width="232" height="448" /></td>
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On top of the immensity of the Olympic Winter Games, it appears the Canadians are planning an after party of equally biblical proportions. Thanks to Andre Saint-Jacques, owner of the Bearfoot Bistro and its extravagant underground <a class="ld_link" href="http://www.modern-wine-cellar.com" target=" " title="wine cellar">wine cellar</a> of more than 20,000 bottles (a perennial winner of the Wine Spectator’s Award of Excellence), the Champagne will flow freely for gold medal winners. And to make things even more thrilling, the Champagne bottles will be ceremoniously decapitated by Saint-Jacques himself - the Guinness World Record holder for most Champagne bottles sabred in a single minute (21).

Opening a Champagne bottle with a sword or saber by hitting the lip of the bottle (its weak point) with the blade, thereby severing the collar from the neck is called "Sabrage" and dates back to the Napoleonic Era. Napoleon was quite the lover of Champagne and is credited with saying, "Champagne! In victory one deserves it; in defeat one needs it." Saint-Jacques, also an effusive lover of the bubbly is Canada's No. 1 importer of Moet &amp; Chandon.
<span id="more-305"></span>
To celebrate the Games, Moet showed their love for their favorite Canadian with a gift: 100 jeroboams (3 liters) and 30 salmanazars (9 liters) of Brut Imperial (these <a href="http://www.modern-wine-cellar.com/wine-bottles.html" target="_self">big bottles</a> are appropriately named for biblical kings). The salmanazars are for Canadian gold medalists and their guests, and the jeroboams will be given to the first Olympic medalists of each country. Saint-Jacques will also offer magnums (1.5 liters) of Champagne to the rest of Canada’s medal winners.

Much like the advice Saint-Jacques gives about beheading Champagne bottles - when drinking multiple glasses of Champagne "Its all in the wrist." That also goes for swallowing the aspirin after.</br>
</br>
This is a post from: <a href="http://www.modern-wine-cellar.com/blog/">The Wine Cellar Blog</a>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Empress Josephine&#8217;s Wine Cellar</title>
		<link>http://www.modern-wine-cellar.com/blog/empress-josephines-wine-cellar/</link>
		<comments>http://www.modern-wine-cellar.com/blog/empress-josephines-wine-cellar/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 12 Dec 2009 20:01:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Bordeaux Wine]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Bordeaux wine lovers may credit the 1855 Exposition Universelle de Paris and Emperor Napoleon III's "Official Classification" with putting Bordeaux wine on the map. But, it turns out that his grandmother the Empress Josephine, first wife of Napoleon Bonaparte may have ignited French passion for the wine. Prior to Josephine raising the status of Bordeaux [...]]]></description>
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												<img src="http://www.modern-wine-cellar.com/blog/wp-content/themes/jambo/thumb.php?src=http://www.modern-wine-cellar.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/Empress_Josephine_2.jpg&amp;h=338&amp;w=248&amp;zc=0&amp;q=90" alt="Empress Josephine"/>
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<a class="ld_link" href="http://www.modern-wine-cellar.com/bordeaux-wine.html" target=" " title="Bordeaux wine">Bordeaux wine</a> lovers may credit the 1855 Exposition Universelle de Paris and Emperor Napoleon III's "Official Classification" with putting Bordeaux wine on the map. But, it turns out that his grandmother the Empress Josephine, first wife of Napoleon Bonaparte may have ignited French passion for the wine.

Prior to Josephine raising the status of Bordeaux to an elixer fit for nobility, it was seen as an inferior product suitable only for the English who had been stubborn lovers of claret, or red Bordeaux wine, for four centuries. At the time of the French Revolution, Burgundy and Champagne reigned supreme, in fact, not a single bottle of Bordeaux is known to have been kept in the <a class="ld_link" href="http://www.modern-wine-cellar.com" target=" " title="wine cellars">wine cellars</a> of King Louis XVI.<span id="more-292"></span>

When Marie-Josephe-Rose de Tascher de La Pagerie (aka Empress Josephine) died in 1814, she left a heap of unpaid bills and a golden legacy to social historians. Marie-Josephe-Rose, was among other things, a great connoisseur and collector of clothes, and an innovative gardener and botanist. The written inventory of her final possessions at her chateau west of Paris has inspired studies and exhibitions on subjects as varied as the fashion trends and gardening styles of the early 19th century.

Josephine was also a celebrated hostess and, although not a great drinker, a great collector of wine. The official inventory of her possessions at her death includes more than 13,000 bottles of wine from all over the world, from Cyprus, Italy, Greece, Spain and Portugal as well as South Africa and Hungary. The empress also kept hundreds of bottles of rum from her native Martinique, which she used in rum punches and served at dinner parties in gilded bowls.

Josephine's chambermaid described her as a "very sober woman." She was partial to very sweet wines including champagne, but drank it all with moderation – like Napoleon.

The Emperor Napoleon's favorites were Burgundy and Champagne, but he also grew fond of South African wines during his time in exile on Saint Helena, the South Atlantic island where he died in 1821 at age 52 – not far from Cape Town.

Study of Josephine's 1814 "wine list" reveals something that may seem unsurprising but was, at the time, extraordinary. Almost half of her bottles and barrels came from vineyards around Bordeaux, little known chateaux that later would become some of the greatest names in wine: Latour, Lafite, Margaux and Haut-Brion.

Was the Empress Josephine the cause of the great switch in French wine tastes which allowed the vineyards of Bordeaux, and especially the great chateaux of the Medoc, to emerge by the mid-19th century as the most prized wines in France and the world?

This is one of the subjects explored in an entertaining exhibition, La Cave de Josephine (Josephine's Cellar), which has started at the Chateaux de Malmaison, where Josephine lived for the last 15 years of her life, and died in June 1814, aged 50.

The exhibition, which will move to Germany and Italy next year, also examines other changes in the art de vivre of the French nobility which followed the fall of the monarchy. Before the Revolution, an aristocratic French dinner-party was a kind of immense, stand-up buffet in which all dishes were served at once. Wine glasses were kept on trays by servants and topped up as required.

After the revolution, France gradually adopted the "Russian" style, now universal, of serving different, sit-down courses one after another. Wine glasses began, to be placed permanently on the table. These changes were driven partly by the post-Revolutionary lack of legions of low-paid servants. France had also finally cracked the "industrial secret" of how to make <a href="http://www.modern-wine-cellar.com/wine-glasses.html" target="_self">crystal wine glasses</a>, something previously known only to the British.</br>
</br>
This is a post from: <a href="http://www.modern-wine-cellar.com/blog/">The Wine Cellar Blog</a>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Storing Wine in Davy Jones Locker</title>
		<link>http://www.modern-wine-cellar.com/blog/storing-wine-in-davy-jones-locker/</link>
		<comments>http://www.modern-wine-cellar.com/blog/storing-wine-in-davy-jones-locker/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 18 May 2009 23:32:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Champagne]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Is the wine cellar passe? Some French wine buffs believe there's a better place for storing wine, at the bottom of the sea (OMG!). A couple years ago, French winemakers began submerging hundreds of bottles of wine at a depth of 30ft in Saint-Malo Bay off the coast of Normandy. After being "massaged by the [...]]]></description>
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<td><a href="http://www.modern-wine-cellar.com/brut-premier.html"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-214" title="brut-premier2" src="http://www.modern-wine-cellar.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/brut-premier2.jpg" alt="brut-premier2" width="141" height="338" /></a></td>
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Is the <a class="ld_link" href="http://www.modern-wine-cellar.com" target=" " title="wine cellar">wine cellar</a> passe? Some French wine buffs believe there's a better place for storing wine, at the bottom of the sea (OMG!). A couple years ago, French winemakers began submerging hundreds of bottles of wine at a depth of 30ft in Saint-Malo Bay off the coast of Normandy. After being "massaged by the sea" for a year, it is said that "underwater whites" have more obvious wood aromas, and "submerged reds" evolve more slowly than cellared wine. Recently, Champagne house, Louis Roederer, sent divers to place several dozen bottles of its <a href="http://www.modern-wine-cellar.com/brut-premier.html">Brut Premier</a> at a depth of 50ft in Saint-Malo bay (hidden of course). In a year's time experts will assess if they have matured with a different or better taste than in the traditional cellars of the Champagne region. The sea may be the ideal wine cellar (i.e. constant temperatures, high humidity, no UV light), but it seems more like bored winemakers playing "Pirates of the Caribbean".

Click here for more information on <a href="http://www.modern-wine-cellar.com/wine-storage.html">wine bottle storage.</a>
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<td><a href="http://www.modern-wine-cellar.com/pirates.html"><img class="alignright size-full wp-image-215" title="pirates" src="http://www.modern-wine-cellar.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/pirates.jpg" alt="pirates" width="241" height="338" /></a></td>
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</br>
This is a post from: <a href="http://www.modern-wine-cellar.com/blog/">The Wine Cellar Blog</a>]]></content:encoded>
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