Ian Sutton
Spanna in the works
2558
Sun Apr 09, 2006 2:10 pm
Norwich, UK
Bob Henrick
Kamado Kommander
3919
Thu Mar 23, 2006 7:35 pm
Lexington, Ky.
Paul B. wrote:As for the "vacuum" devices, I admit to being a complete non-believer: you cannot get a true vacuum with such a device, as the resulting pressure differential between the inside of the bottle would either result in the wine boiling (i.e. liquid water, much less alcohol, doesn't exist in a true vacuum) or atmospheric pressure crushing the bottle, or both. Maybe a bottle can withstand the almost 15 lbs / square inch of atmospheric pressure at sea level? I don't know ... but without a true vacuum in the bottle, you still have air working on the wine. THEREFORE, I would be highly partial to using inert gas, then recorking and refrigerating the wine if it is to be stored for any length of time.
Todd Greeno wrote:In the interim, feel free to conjecture which of these you believe saves the wine for the longest time span:
Vacuuming air out of the bottle.
Pour the remaining wine into a small bottle and cork with no air space.
Pour the wine into a 375 ml bottle and cork (leaving some air in the bottle).
Just cork the original bottle with remaining wine and set aside in a cool area.
Paul B. wrote:Thanks for the specs, Mark - most interesting.
Having said that, I think I'd still go for the inert gas as a way of not affecting the wine's volatile components, at the same time simply displacing the oxygen in the headspace with a non-reactive gas.
Speaking as an organic chemist with much experience in deoxygenating solvents, let me point out that the spray cans of nitrogen or argon won't do a very good job of removing dissolved oxygen from the wine itself.
Randy Buckner wrote:I gas all of the sample bottles I receive and pass them out to the neighbors (a very happy neighborhood). The wines hold for a week or more without problems.
Randy, I guess this make you the neighborhood gas passer.
Randy Buckner wrote:Mark, not trying to be a smartass, but I didn't think the purpose of Private Preserve and ilk was to remove dissolved oxygen from wine, but rather to replace oxygen in the headspace to slow deterioration of the wine.
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