Certainly as the popularity of wine has risen there has been more and more young wine opened, and also some shifts in style to make wines more accessible in their youth.
The question really is, what is worth cellaring? As many here know, I am not a big proponent of aging Muscadet or Beaujolais, though some of the cognoscenti suggest that it is the thing to do. I haven't been convinced that the gains from aging exceed counterbalance the loss of the youthful virtues of those wines, not to mention the various logistical issues of keeping them for extended periods of time. Rahsaan recently wrote about a 2005 Huet Vouvray Sec that was to him quite delicious in its current state. Certainly the ability of Huet wines to age and change over decades is beyond dispute, but are they better for the age? Is someone a "lesser wine geek" (to partially steal from Neil Martin) for not appreciating the specific virtues of older Vouvray, Riesling, Bandol, Bordeaux, Cote Rotie or even Burgundy?
So given the current state of winemaking (there is little point in debating the merits of cellaring Bordeaux from the '60s and '70s as we can't buy them for cellaring at this point), what is truly worth aging and why? For how long?
Please show your work.
