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FREE $25 Wine Voucher from CellarMasters.com.au

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Cellarmaster Wines, in conjunction with Better Homes & Gardens, is offering a free $25 voucher. You simply need to provide your email address and they will email you a unique voucher code for your $25 voucher.

Conditions:

Offer valid until 31st December 2010
Only one voucher may be redeemed per person, valid for single use only
Voucher can only be used on wine purchases (excludes Twin Packs, Bin Ends and the Deal of the Month)
Voucher cannot be redeemed for any beer or FREE beer offers

Related Stores

Cellarmasters
Cellarmasters

closed Comments

  • +2

    Site looks to be getting hammered.. When I enter my email and click send voucher it craps itself.

    "Sorry, we were unable to retrieve the page you were looking for.

    Please contact us here or phone 1800 500 260 for assistance.

    To return to our Home Page, click here"

    • +1

      ditto! what to do?

      • $25 Voucher CODES to save people from signing up:
        BHG6726275
        BHG55342255
        BHG3952145
        BHG1181065
        BHG49797045
        BHG38703565

        • BHG94869825

          i have no use for my code too

    • my page when white, i think i might have gotten in, shouldve been patient. but then retried and got same page as you…. =[

    • Looks like it's working now

  • good if you can get it though..

  • Minimum Spend?

    • +1
       Terms & Conditions: This offer is valid for 30 days on receipt of 
       this voucher for purchases with a minimum order value of $0.
      
  • Can't I buy single bottle? don't see anything like that?

    • -1

      Oh yeah. Penfold Grange Shira 2005. They are selling single bottle :P

      • Full Price $650.00 Your price $550.00 Just $550.00 a bottle Save $100.00

      • very funny :P

  • anyone can recommend me a good red from that website?

  • +1

    Looks like the cheapest thing is http://www.cellarmasters.com.au/wines/Penfolds-Rawson%27s-Re… @ $41.94

    • plus $5.95 shipping. No freebies possible :)

      • mines coming up at $7.95 delivery and $1 delivery quarantee so $8.95 how do you get $5.95 delivery ?

        • nevermind looks like its different amounts for different regions

    • my local IGA sells this for $5.95 per bottle.though with voucher, this works out to be cheaper.

    • Thanks for the link. I don't mind this for a cheap wine, and for under $4 a bottle without me having to lug them home on a train, it's a good deal!

  • +4

    Ahh sucks can't use for the t-shirts. They learn from their previous mistake :D

    Here's the free 25 bucks to save you sign up :p BHG90798665

    • +1

      Voucher numbers are different for everyone

    • +1

      The really good thing is that they did send out the tshirts and everything to people last time :)

      and if it's not great for their business, apart from the promotional value, I'm glad they've changed the system this time around :)

  • Rosemount Estate Diamond Label Cabernet Sauvignon (6-bottle Case) 2008
    http://www.cellarmasters.com.au/tastingnote.aspx?offerproductcode=R1318MFEQMF10

    • Drink Until: 2012
      I thought the longer the red wine's been sitting there the better?
      What's up with that?

      • i wanna know about this too.

      • It's Rosemount… Probably the ridiculous amount of preservatives and flavour enhancers they put in their wines go bad.

      • +6

        Only a decent quality red wine (often around $20 min per btl but there is no hard and fast rule), however even the best wine has a limited life span, will peak after many years, and then go downhill after that.

        However the cheapest nastiest wines have a very short life span, so if you see "Drink to 2012" on any young wine other than a Sauvignon Blanc then it's code for "cheap and very nasty".

        Cheap quality wine will not improve no matter how long you store it, if it's bad it will always be bad and will get even worse with age. Wine needs certain components to improve with age - quality fruit, acid, tannin, all equally balanced. If they are unbalanced or a component is lacking then it will not improve and will soon get worse.

        OTOH very good wines have all these components and usually don't even taste very good until they are at least 5-10 years old when the acid mellows and the flavours integrate. Keeping in mind you have to store them in a cool (max 18 degrees) dark place to get the best results.

        In regards to this wine website, the majority of their wines are what I put into the cheap (and many of them nasty) category and being forced to buy a dozen of the same wine is rather lame. And I've learned the hard way that pre-chosen mixed dozens are dangerous - all too often you end up stuck with 2 good wines and 10 nasty ones they are trying to offload.

        • Thanks for your input mate, you learn something new everyday!

        • sparklings also have a very short life too

          • @SomeGuyOnOzB: Not true at all. Many of the oldest and finest wines in the world are sparkling (champagne). Dom perignon, Cristal, Krug, Pol Roger, etc.

            http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/divers-find-o…

            Even decent Aussie ones will improve with age, eg. 1998 Croser. Tassie makes some nice mid-term ageable sparklings. Again it comes down to how well made the wine is. Whilst it's easier to make an ageable red wine, you just have to pay a bit more to get something that can age in the sparkling category (typically $50+).

            Riesling is another underrated ageable wine, and you often only have to spend around $20 to get something that will age. The german ones can age for 50 years no problem and get very expensive. Many drier (non-sweet) Aussie Rieslings such as Petaluma can go 20 years quite easily, and get toasty and nutty flavours. Same goes for Hunter Valley Semillons. Chardonnay can age well too (particularly Burgundy).

            Sauvignon Blanc is one of the few grapes that, almost always, won't and isn't made to age. Personally I hate the stuff, it's like passionpop.

  • +3

    these guys will try hard to get more sales after you sign up to use your first voucher, not just spam by email but I got heaps of letters in the post and quite a few phone calls too..

    • +1

      +1 I my mailbox, physical and email has been bombarded by these guys since using the first voucher.

  • +2

    Iggy likes alcohol :)

  • code: BHG88085565

  • Self moderation? :)

    • yep :P

      I do it often to myself, if I post something but later consider it not that relevant.

      Maybe it's helpful …

      I tried buying a 6 bottle case of sparkling red, but the voucher did not work.
      http://www.cellarmasters.com.au/wines/Black-Wattle-Mt-C130X_…

      I didn't see any markings that it's a bin end, clearance etc but the voucher did not work with it.

      Though the voucher is working with a 12 bottle case of award winning wine. $71.94 before shipping or discounts so maybe $53 (around $4.60 a bottle). Notes: I'm not into wines too much and I haven't heard of that magazine that gave the awards

      http://www.cellarmasters.com.au/wines/Calvet-Reserve-Sauvign…

  • +1

    For anyone who does not know, a lot (most by volume?) of the wine sold by Cellarmasters is their own brands which you will not see in your local bottle shop, and are not real wineries. Googling them just finds wine clubs run by Cellarmasters, and other online sellers.
    So don't believe the "1/2 price" claims. They can make up any old RRP, and then sell it at half that.
    It can be very good value, with the coupons, but try not to be influenced by the fake discounts.
    The $50-off, $120 min-spend coupons are good. (message me if you need one)

  • +1

    just purchased Penfolds Rawson's Retreat Shiraz Cabernet Sauvignon 6 bottle for ($23.89 including postage) after $25 discount going to use it on my cooking

  • I purchased 6 x Voyager Estate Sauvignon Blanc Semillon 2009 incl. shipping $15.30 a bottle, my local liquor store has it at $18.99(in a six) this should be a very nice wine tasting notes - http://www.winestar.com.au/prod984.htm - James Halliday rating 93 points

  • +1

    Everyone always seems to get excited about $25 off at online Wine stores. There's barely anything worth less than $40 or $50, certainly nothing worth buying till you well exceed that price range. At which point you're better off going to Dan Murphy's and finding something genuinely well priced. And there's no danger of being tied into a marketing downfall. These guys love sending regular pamphlets to your house.

  • I just got my wine+beer delivered, so it works on those.

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