Colloquial term for a wine that has reached the end of its life cycle and is therefore undrinkable (it is "over"); see under dead.
Term for a negative judgement of a wine in the context of a wine evaluation or a wine review. Such a wine has reached the end of its life cycle and is undrinkable. Other terms are dead, "the wine is gone" and "wine corpse". The French "passé" is identical. A preliminary stage that is still just edible is referred to as overaged (superimposed). In a "dead" wine, almost all positive sensory characteristics have disappeared; essential components have lost their stability and expressiveness for good. The sensory and chemical changes described below occur primarily under typical ageing conditions and are not always present in full or to the same extent.

Historical wine bottles: 1 = Malmsey 1880, Madeira variant; 2 = various old red wines; 3 = Heidsieck Monopole, found in a shipwreck. However, the bottles shown do not represent "dead" or spoilt wines, but are intended solely to illustrate the great age and appearance of wines that have been stored for decades or centuries. Some of the very old wines shown in pictures 1 and 3 (82 years old) were still drinkable.
The terms emaciated, brittle, bland, flat, hollow (empty) and over-aged describe quality states that typically precede - often in combination - the final stage...
![]()
For my many years of work as an editor with a wine and culinary focus, I always like to inform myself about special questions at Wine lexicon. Spontaneous reading and following links often leads to exciting discoveries in the wide world of wine.
Dr. Christa Hanten
Fachjournalistin, Lektorin und Verkosterin, Wien