by Keith M » Mon Jan 08, 2007 10:19 am
Wow. Again, great stuff. I am learning by the minute here. Let my update my thinking here a bit.
1. I’m starting to think of this faults as less of a dichotomous variable (is the wine corked or not) and more as a continuous variable (is this wine sufficiently affected by TCA such that I find some perceptible objectionable features).
2. TCA has probably been more prevalent in my wines than I have realized, but that doesn’t trouble me. A fault that no one who is drinking finds objectionable isn’t really a fault, is it? Kind of like that old saying about the tree that falls in the forest with nobody around to hear it.
3. Oxidation has actually been a bigger problem for me than I have realized. The flabbiness and darkened color of my Croatian Prošip can pretty likely be attributed to unintentional oxidation either during winemaking or storage. And, of course, oxidation does not vinegar make!
4. Alas, I popped yet another flawed bottle since first posting. This one’s nose was not really affected, but it had an alas all-too-familiar volatile spiky acidity thing going on that made it really unpleasant. I have encountered this a few too many times in Virginia wines that I have bought. Possibly, this could be due to a secondary fermentation due to the presence of unwanted bacteria?
5. Now one person’s flaw is another person’s fancy, but a lot of the flaws I’ve been experiencing would be unwelcome for most folks, I think. The fact that many of them come from ‘emerging’ wine regions such as Virginia and Croatia makes me think that a lot of this may be due to newcomers finding their way. What the best tradeoff for oxidation versus reduction? What are the proper precautions to take so that bacterial contamination doesn’t hijack a wine? And so on . . .
But the thing that continues to puzzle me a bit is that the wine didn’t have any obvious flaws to my palate when I tasted it at the winery—but definitely had them when I opened the bottle I purchased at home. (I have certainly tasted a lot of wines with the flaws mentioned in the thread, but didn’t purchase them!) Some possibilities come to my mind:
A – The time elapsed between my tasting at the winery and my consumption at home made the flaws perceptible to my palate (and, of course, tasting fatigue when at the winery is a possibility, but these flaws seem really obvious—I don’t think I would have missed them).
B – The wine that I tasted and the wine that I bought came from different batches (theirs from an uncontaminated barrel, mine from a contaminated one). I have no idea if winemakers in general blend everything together before bottling or not.
C – There were different storage conditions for the tasting bottle and the purchase bottle prior to purchase.
D – My transport and storage of the wine were to blame. Or an enclosure problem on the purchased bottle.
E – I have lousy luck and got the random bottle that, say, didn’t get all the oxygen flushed out of the bottle before the wine went in.
Anyhow, thank you everyone! You’ll be hearing from me again on the better bottles . . .