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Peter May
Pinotage Advocate
3905
Mon Mar 20, 2006 11:24 am
Snorbens, England
Peter May
Pinotage Advocate
3905
Mon Mar 20, 2006 11:24 am
Snorbens, England
David Lole wrote:, but would just like to add, the alternative cork closure, "Diam", seems to be very well regarded/received by wineries, winemakers and wine lovers alike over this side of the world.
David Lole wrote:the alternative cork closure, "Diam", seems to be very well regarded/received by wineries, winemakers and wine lovers alike over this side of the world.
Peter May
Pinotage Advocate
3905
Mon Mar 20, 2006 11:24 am
Snorbens, England
David Lole wrote:Peter,
Here's some discussion off our local board to kick you off. I'll do some more digging if you want when I'm not so busy.
Peter May
Pinotage Advocate
3905
Mon Mar 20, 2006 11:24 am
Snorbens, England
Michael Pronay wrote: As to the claims of the cork industry, Diam definitely is in another league.
Michael Pronay wrote: This does *not* mean that Diam is only a midterm closure
Peter May wrote:Michael Pronay wrote: As to the claims of the cork industry, Diam definitely is in another league.
So they say. All I am saying is "let's see".
Your post mentions TCA; so its TCA free, well so are screwcaps. And screwcaps don't need a corkscrew and they don't impart the taste of cork to the wine.
Peter May wrote:Michael Pronay wrote: This does *not* mean that Diam is only a midterm closure
So they say. All I am saying is "let's see".
Peter May
Pinotage Advocate
3905
Mon Mar 20, 2006 11:24 am
Snorbens, England
Michael Pronay wrote: Diam doesn't impart any taste
Peter May
Pinotage Advocate
3905
Mon Mar 20, 2006 11:24 am
Snorbens, England
Michael Pronay wrote: Peter, after the processing via supercritical CO2, which at a pressure of 100 bars washes out anything that can impart any type of aroma, the cork granulate is 100% tasteless. Cork loses its elasticity during that process, that's why you need these "microspheres" mentioned in that Australian thread.
There are a few discrepancies between what Dean, the Oz rep for Diam, claimed and what the French guy presenting Diam here in Austria said. I asked these questions very recently on that Oz forum http://snipurl.com/r0n1 — without response yet..
There are two studies that certify 100% taint freeness, and no bottle variation has occurred in all these tests.
I wonder why you would consider a "test" environment (that includes heating and cooling for test purpuses and all type of abuse) somehow "better" than normal ageing in a cellar? If any, it's the other way round.
As to the numbers of wines tasted, roughly a dozen, including a sparkler stoppered with Diam's sparkler brother, Mytik.
Don't you think the growers using Diam — both in the test phase and now after the commercial launch — would have been the first to cry "Fire!" if anything would go wrong?
Btw, Diam is the first cork product ever to give both a 100% taint free and a 100% tightness guarantee. None of the so-called solutions of the past — you and I have heard them touting it more than once! — ever gave any type of warranty.
Peter, it's not the warranty that give me this confidence, it's the understanding of the type of process. At the presentation there were two guy from Natex who explaiend the treatment. They come from a completely different side: Their normal job is constructing aroma extraction machinery for the perfume and the food industry, including decaffeinating coffee.
I do trust them, confirmed by the results of two studies and by test running up to four and five years.
There is one inconvenience: Supercritical CO2 treatment leads to loss of elasticity. They had tried to treat whole corks in the past, but at these pressure levels the corks were irreversibly deformed. That's why you need these polymer microspheres to bring back elasticity.
If I have any doubts about Diam, it would be the elasticity in the long and very long run — but definitely not about taint-freeness and bottle variation.
David M. Bueker
Childless Cat Dad
34932
Thu Mar 23, 2006 11:52 am
Connecticut
Covert wrote:Paul, to me drinking from a bottle with a plastic plug seems a bit like having sex with a condom.
Peter May wrote:David Lole wrote:, but would just like to add, the alternative cork closure, "Diam", seems to be very well regarded/received by wineries, winemakers and wine lovers alike over this side of the world.
I've never had a wine closed with Diam - has anyone here???
Michael Pronay wrote:My position is quite clear: getting rid of bark and synthetics, bring along screwcaps, Diam or crown caps (the latter for sparklers).
Robin Garr wrote:Michael Pronay wrote:My position is quite clear: getting rid of bark and synthetics, bring along screwcaps, Diam or crown caps (the latter for sparklers).
Michael, but is not Diam a bark product? And is it not made by Oeneo, the French firm that brought us the ... Altec?
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