by Bob Ross » Mon Mar 19, 2007 2:02 pm
Thanks Covert and Joe for two very interesting answers.
TCA's safety has been a moot point for me for several years-- at the first sniff (or taste) I've poured the bottle of wine down the drain. But Tim's recent apparently tongue in cheek comment about the "horrors" of drinking corked wine made me re-think the issue. In fact, I've never knowingly drunk corked wine, and I may be the poorer for not doing so.
Janet gave me a wine scent kit several years ago, and I supplemented it with a small kit of "wine flaws", including a small vial of TCA. That sample was so distinctive I can remember it vividly even now.
A couple of months later I attended an Executive Wine tasting of upscale Italian wines; according to my diary one wine stood out:
1990 Tignanello - Corked. 1*. Bob Millman said it was a 9.5 out of 10.0 corkiness on the corkiness scale. He suggested that we try to get something out of the wine anyway, but I find that the taste cork lingers on into the taste of other wines. Millman said that the tannins will survive corkiness, that the color was a very deep red, and that underneath the corkiness he could tell the wine had everything. [Tannic wet cardboard and dirty sweat socks? I'll pass!] Tuscany Italy.
I posted my notes, and Robert Callahan was blunt:
Millman should not after all these years be telling people to try to "get something" out of a corky wine. Commenting on what will survive in a corky bottle is absurd. It's a bad bottle - end of story.
I've taken Robert's advice -- like so much else I've learned on WLDG -- to heart for many years, and poured out many bottles of corked wine in the years since.
And yet, Tim's tiny "horrors" gnaws at me -- a bit sarcastic, perhaps, but certainly a wine lover that thinks drinking corked wine is not such a bad thing. Could Tim [and Millman] be right? Could I have been wrong all these years. Certainly I have no objective basis for thinking otherwise.
I'm pretty sure a good examples of corked wines will come up from my cellar over the next several weeks based on past experience, and I've decided to drink a few bottles to see if TCA is really horrible. Thus the reason for my question about TCA safety.
A few arguments in favor of the experiment.
1. Philosophically, it's always seemed important to try to understand other people's points of view -- TCA has advocates eager to extol its romantic and other aspects -- I'm ashamed to admit that I've simply rejected their arguments in the past.
2. Psychologically, I've always enjoyed trying new foods and drinks -- it's almost an addiction and it's been a great source of pleasure in my life.
3. As a corollary, I'm put off by "picky" eaters -- I cooked for several of my brothers and sisters and it was amazing at how many good foods they would refuse to eat -- or even try.
4. My initial reactions to new foods has sometimes been negative -- I hated beer for a week or two, and eventually guzzled many gallons of the stuff with real pleasure. Limburger, liver, chitterlings, a few other foods, took serious sampling before their pleasures shone through.
5. Trying new foods sometimes takes an effort of will -- for example, I shared a half dozen durians during a trip to Malaysia, with three different durian lovers -- before I finally understood the attraction of the fruit.
6. I've got a pretty short list of "disgusting" foods left to try -- Baalut is the leading contender at the moment. Baalut has proven surprisingly elusive to find; luckily, finding a corked wine will be relatively easy.
7. TCA itself has some interesting aspects; people use quite different words to describe the aroma and taste: "moldy" or "musty" or "earthy" or "medicinal" or "cardboard" or "wet cardboard" or "dirty socks". Tastes are difficult to describe in words, of course, but many wine descriptors are not particularly appetizing -- "cat pee" and "horse poop" spring to mind -- and the varying TCA descriptors suggest interesting possibilities.
8. Some TCA aromas and flavors seem to be created by "natural" compounds, one of the currently hot words in the food and drinks world.
9. Other TCA aromas and flavors are said to come from the winery structures and winemaking techniques; is corkiness is an essential element of a wine's "terroir"? Will the flavors and aromas, stay true to particular cork forests in Portugal? True to particular wooden beams in California or France? True to particular formulations of chlorine disinfectants?
10. And, perhaps most important, since TCA can apparently avoided, winemakers must actually intend to produce corked wines. The least I can do is try the results of their efforts and in Bob Millman's words "try to get something out of the wine". One has to respect the winemaker at least enough to actually try their products.
***
So, Covert, Joe and Tim, thanks very much for opening the door to yet another vinous adventure. I'll report back in due course -- the journey may not be as horrible as I've considered it to be these many years past.
Regards, Bob
Last edited by Bob Ross on Mon Mar 19, 2007 2:15 pm, edited 1 time in total.