Moderators: Jenise, Robin Garr, David M. Bueker
Sam Platt
I am Sam, Sam I am
2330
Sat Mar 25, 2006 12:22 pm
Indiana, USA
Paul Winalski
Wok Wielder
8494
Wed Mar 22, 2006 9:16 pm
Merrimack, New Hampshire
Robin Garr wrote:From a blind tasting of 13,000 wines, they discovered 4% of the wine with corks had faults from oxidation or high sulphide levels - giving it an eggy flavour - compared with 2% of screw-cap bottles.
Dale Williams
Compassionate Connoisseur
11422
Tue Mar 21, 2006 4:32 pm
Dobbs Ferry, NY (NYC metro)
Dale Williams
Compassionate Connoisseur
11422
Tue Mar 21, 2006 4:32 pm
Dobbs Ferry, NY (NYC metro)
Paul Winalski wrote:So those statistics mean that wines with a screw-cap closure have only half the defect rate of those closed with cork. Sounds like a big win for screw-caps to me.
And what's sulphide got to do with faulty closures? I thought it was completely unrelated. TCA and oxidation are the main cork fault problems, I thought.
Ian Sutton
Spanna in the works
2558
Sun Apr 09, 2006 2:10 pm
Norwich, UK
Sam Platt wrote:Geez Robin! I'll bet that you've shouted "FIRE!" in a crowded movie house.
I will succinctly sum up the thread yet to come to save everyone's time:
"See, screw caps do suck!"
"No, cork sucks more!"
"You're a jerk!"
"You're a bigger jerk!"
Paul Winalski
Wok Wielder
8494
Wed Mar 22, 2006 9:16 pm
Merrimack, New Hampshire
Robin Garr wrote:The main screwcap fault production is sulfur-related flaws from reductiveness, and I assumed that was the source of this reference, again perhaps twisted by a reporter without technical knowledge or much skepticism.
Paul Winalski wrote:reductive problems due to faulty winemaking.
Oliver McCrum
Wine guru
1076
Wed Mar 22, 2006 1:08 am
Oakland, CA; Cigliè, Piedmont
Oliver McCrum wrote:I've seen measurements of oxygen transmission through cork and it sounds as if there's a huge range, from almost none to way too much.
And I would say that not preparing a wine for bottling in a way consistent with the closure could certainly be termed 'faulty winemaking.' This problem has been talked about since the AWRI study came out, if not sooner.
But I'm mystified, I drink as many wines as I can from screwcap and I've found very few with reductive aroma; besides, in some areas (the Loire, Alsace, Friuli) many of the wines have needed airing out for as long as I've been drinking them. This isn't new.
Robin Garr wrote:Paul Winalski wrote:reductive problems due to faulty winemaking.
Mmm, possibly faulty reasoning there, Paul. The reductive problems have to do with aging wine in an anaerobic environment, and that is in fact a result of the screwcap transmitting much less O2 than natural cork. There may be some ways to address it, but attributing the issue to "faulty winemaking" sinply isn't accurate.
Sam Platt wrote:
I will succinctly sum up the thread yet to come to save everyone's time:
"See, screw caps do suck!" "No, cork sucks more!" "You're a jerk!"
"You're a bigger jerk!"
Thomas wrote:Could be that, since many of the wines going into screwcapped bottles are on the lesser priced end they are younger and so they are produced in an overly anaerobic manner right up to bottling, perhaps with too vigorous an SO2 regimen, and then the screwcap's anti-oxygen sturcture adds flame to that fire.
Robin Garr wrote: If we think about it seriously, the technology challenge of coming up with the perfect container for long-term storage of an organic, evolving product is not trivial, and perhaps we should be amazed that the industry has solved it as well as it has rather than quibbling about the last percentage point or two. It's not a simple thing, and in contrast to the way that these debates generally shake out, it's really not a Manichean battle between good and evil, either.
Thomas wrote:Could be that, since many of the wines going into screwcapped bottles are on the lesser priced end they are younger and so they are produced in an overly anaerobic manner right up to bottling, perhaps with too vigorous an SO2 regimen, and then the screwcap's anti-oxygen sturcture adds flame to that fire.
Sue Courtney wrote:Um, Thomas .... if you look at what is happening in New Zealand, it is wine across all price ranges that are going into screwcap, and the same could be said for Australia too, judging by the number of higher priced Aussie reds I've seen in screwcap lately.
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