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Jack, the Very Bad Dog
Your sentiment also goes for unfinished bottles of wine that are getting long in the tooth (hey, it happens). If I have a third of a bottle of cabernet that I opened last week sitting in my fridge, you bet your ass I'm going to use it boost my marinara sauce or deglace a pan of sauteed veggies instead of throwing it away.
Now, you still want to pay attention to your flavor compatibilities when determining whether an old/flawed wine will go with your dish (i.e., don't dump a super sweet wine into a savory recipe unless you want the dish to have a hint of sweetness and likewise, don't pour a tannic red into a crock of chocolate fondue, etc.), but by and large, the subtleties (and flaws) burn off during cooking.
There's a reason why God made $4.79 bottles of Yellow Tail, plentiful at every supermarket in the U.S. Because it's absolutely ludicrous to pay more for a wine that's going to be cooked with.
But are you saying you wouldn't cook with a wine that you WOULD drink? Are you denying that what you said earlier confirms your aforementioned thesis? (Okay...I'm joking) But seriously, do you simply wait for a bottle that you deem 'unpalatable' and then set it next to the stove? Personally...I'm with the bumper sticker people..."Sure I cook with wine....sometimes I put it in the food" And if I'm cooking Italian...(which is what I do best...) then whatever bottle I'm drinking at the moment, be it a Montepulciano, a chianti or maybe even a dolcetto...(or maybe a mixture of the three...I'm crazy like that) be sure that some of that is going into the food. So yes, I only cook with wine I drink.
Those of us in cold-weather climes are also big on mulling leftover/not-that-great red wines in winter time, too. (I believe the term for this stuff is Glogg, with an umlaut over the "o"). Round mulling spice baskets are available at your local kitchen-supply store for $4 (the mesh is similar to a flour sifter). Load 'em up with a few broken-up cinnamon sticks, some whole cloves, orange zest and a couple small pieces of apple (optional) and simmer on low heat, stirring occasionally, until the wine is piping hot and the flavors from the basket are imbued throughout. I like to add a couple teaspoons of sugar at the end, and if I'm feeling adventurous, a small pinch of curry powder.
I realize this is not really "cooking" with wine, per se, but it's a great way to finish an opened bottle of red that you weren't crazy about.
While it is rare that a good bottle ever has anything left in it at my house, the same things you describe happen here, as well. While I've never been able to develop much of a taste for mulled wine, around the holidays there are few things that can make a house smell as festive as a pan of it warming on the stove.