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Dale Williams
Compassionate Connoisseur
11433
Tue Mar 21, 2006 4:32 pm
Dobbs Ferry, NY (NYC metro)
Dale Williams
Compassionate Connoisseur
11433
Tue Mar 21, 2006 4:32 pm
Dobbs Ferry, NY (NYC metro)
Dale Williams
Compassionate Connoisseur
11433
Tue Mar 21, 2006 4:32 pm
Dobbs Ferry, NY (NYC metro)
AlexR wrote:GIGO? Was my report on the corked wine garbage? I wish you were here to taste the wine that's left in the bottle....
You raise the reasonable argument that 400 reports out of a total production of 4,000 cases is not the same as 400 reports on 40,000 cases. Granted.
Still, the fact that 400 people write in to lodge a specific complaint about *any* wine should - legitimately - be seen as a red flag..
Sorry, I don't know what CT stands for..
My answer to this is: are there examles of similar vendattas such as you refer to on WLDG or any other wine forum?
Is such a thing really likely to happen?.
Randy R wrote:Interesting point, Bob. In a country where you can buy cholesterol and blood sugar testers in any discount drugstore, why can't we have TCA testers? Or are there?
Dale Williams
Compassionate Connoisseur
11433
Tue Mar 21, 2006 4:32 pm
Dobbs Ferry, NY (NYC metro)
Why accept fatalistically the "5% rate for normal cork taint"???
I don't.
I don't think it's reasonable at all.
Frankly, I'm mighty pissed off when a pricey bottle of wine has to go down the drain. And I don't think the people responsible for this deserve a free ride. In short, they should pay the piper: either refund the fautly merchandise (definitely the "pie in the sky" aspect of things cited in the header - although - any good retailer should refund a corked bottle, or restaurant replace it...) or lose sales for widespread incidence.
Furthermore, the producer should sue their cork supplier or underwrite some sort of insurance ***if*** cork taint is as inevitable as you say it is. .
>, one reasonably would expect 24,000 bottles of the 40K case wine to be faulty
Not me, Dale.
Not in the 21st century. .
I know how to drive a car, but know virtually nothing about automotive mechanics. I'm pretty much the same with the Internet.
I sure wish I had the necessary skills...
However, the format you speak of doesn't need to be sophisticated at all. .
"Because the biggest problem in getting folks motivated is that the vast majority of TCA taint is not an indication of a problem with that wine! "
I do not understand this statement, which seems paradoxical.
If you mean "it's a problem with the cork, not the wine", the end result is nevertheless identical: undrinkable wine.
Obviously, isolated instances should not damn an estates' entire production. But a series of instances should serve as a warning to consumers.
Dale Williams wrote:Robin seems to believe the cork folks' claim that they have basically eliminated the problem, I don't trust them that much. We'll see with time.
Dale Williams
Compassionate Connoisseur
11433
Tue Mar 21, 2006 4:32 pm
Dobbs Ferry, NY (NYC metro)
Robin Garr wrote:Amorim has presented compelling testimony to support their claim to have reduced the incidence of TCA taint in their natural corks to <i>near</i> zero and to have eliminated it from what they call "technical corks," with twin ends of treated natural cork protecting an agglomerated core.
Dale Williams
Compassionate Connoisseur
11433
Tue Mar 21, 2006 4:32 pm
Dobbs Ferry, NY (NYC metro)
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