David Creighton
Wine guru
1217
Wed May 24, 2006 10:07 am
ann arbor, michigan
Howie Hart
The Hart of Buffalo
6389
Thu Mar 23, 2006 4:13 pm
Niagara Falls, NY
James G. Lester
Wine geek
69
Wed Jan 10, 2007 12:37 am
Buchanan, Michigan
James G. Lester wrote:Tom,
I've experienced this many times with European wines. Less so with New World wines except my own! European wines often go into the bottle with higher free SO2 than many domestic wines. They also generally have a lower pH, which makes the SO2 more effective at numbing the midpalate. What you are experiencing is the oxygen combining with the free sulfer dioxide (SO2) in the glass over time. The acidity doesn't change chemically, but our perception changes as the sulfer blows off and the midpalate fleshes out, absorbing the sharp edge of the tartaric acid. The result is more flesh and fruit in the middle, which lessens the PERCEPTION of acidity.
Jim Lester
James G. Lester
Wine geek
69
Wed Jan 10, 2007 12:37 am
Buchanan, Michigan
James G. Lester wrote:Thomas,
You are quite correct. I didn't notice the vintage date listed before I made my comments on free SO2. The free SO2 would all be combined into the wine at that age.
However, I stand by my comment that there is a numbing effect from bottling SO2 levels that persists many years after bottling. This is readily apparant to anyone who drinks old Bordeaux or old white Burgundy. I have had many old bottles of both ( and other wines from Europe) that exhibited a burnt match stick aroma (sulfer) when opened into a decanter, but after an hour of airing this stink dissipated. As soon as the smell is gone, one can better perceive the fruit and body of the wine. I am a lowly grapegrower/winemaker, and not a PhD chemist, but I still think we are dealing with the after effects of SO2 or residual compounds. I do know from my own lab experiments with total acidity that acid levels in properly cold-stabilized wines remains pretty constant throughout the life of a wine.
And of course I could be mistaken!
Jim Lester
Oliver McCrum
Wine guru
1076
Wed Mar 22, 2006 1:08 am
Oakland, CA; Cigliè, Piedmont
James G. Lester wrote:Tom,
I've experienced this many times with European wines. Less so with New World wines except my own! European wines often go into the bottle with higher free SO2 than many domestic wines. They also generally have a lower pH, which makes the SO2 more effective at numbing the midpalate. What you are experiencing is the oxygen combining with the free sulfer dioxide (SO2) in the glass over time. The acidity doesn't change chemically, but our perception changes as the sulfer blows off and the midpalate fleshes out, absorbing the sharp edge of the tartaric acid. The result is more flesh and fruit in the middle, which lessens the PERCEPTION of acidity.
Jim Lester
Steve Slatcher
Wine guru
1047
Sat Aug 19, 2006 11:51 am
Manchester, England
Users browsing this forum: AhrefsBot, ClaudeBot, Google AgentMatch and 1 guest