The Red Viper
Well-Known Member
Loosely related to above, I'm aware that lambic generally ages "well." I've had 14 year old lambic once and see plenty of great reviews of similar lambic from 98, 99, 00 range. I don't see too much older, let alone a lot older beyond a few trainwrecks (dontdrinkbeer's review of the 81 Belle Vue gueuze comes to mind). Is there a general consensus of how lambic can age beyond 15 years? I'm talking 25, 40, 50 years. Are you going to have more luck with Cantillon vs. some of the lesser gueuzeries (is that word?)?
I'm not a veteran at drinking super old lambic or anything but my guess is it's hard to say partly because there is so little lambic older than 10-15 yrs where the storage conditions can even be accurately accounted for, much less where you can be assured those conditions were really appropriate for long term aging. The older bottles that are out there seem mostly to be crapshoots in this sense. In other words I would imagine the sample size of bottles that are this old, that were high quality to begin with, and that have been properly stored is too small to draw any clear conclusions. Maybe I'm wrong.