Collecting and aging wine - case lot periodic tasting over time - 
There are two  risks to buying a full case of a wine... that you drink it too young,  or, that you hang on it too long. (Some might say that you get it home and don't like it. As my teenager used to say, "Duh, Dad." You try it before you buy it. If and when you can't - the wine market has become incredibly 'liquid' with auctions to market and sell your wine. Worst case (you make the call whether pun intended ;>) ) you give it away as gifts, serve it, or hold it and one day find out its really really good after all!) The point is, if you don't taste a  wine multiple times at various stages of its life - how will you know?  Part of the fun and experience of tasting wine is to witness a wine's  maturation and transformation over time. I have heard that the Italian's  drink their wine too young, and the French drink it too old. Alas, its  all in the eye's of the beholder. I purchased a case of Dominus Napa  Proprietary Red Wine 1986 back upon release in the mid-eighties. I  dutifully put it aside but succumbed to temptation to open a bottle  every couple of years ... Invariably I was disappointed and underwhelmed  by a rather flat uninspiring 'closed' wine. Finally, a couple of years  ago in 2007 - I noted in my tasting notes (published on unWindwine.com) - "The  Dominus now 20 years     old continues to reveal its character through  floral bouquet and     flavors of violet and rose petals reminding me  again that I drank     most of this case way too young - year after year  waiting for it to     open and reveal itself." (The previous tasting note posted in 2002 should have been an indicator - "Dominus took three hours to open but when it        did, it exploded with floral fruit.") 
Indeed, having  purchased a lot of Bordeaux wines during their magnificent run in the  eighties, I eventually learned, like the Dominus, I drank them too  early. C'est la vie. I am now more patient with such wines. That's how  or why you end up with a thousand (s) plus bottles in your cellar!    
 
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