originally posted by SFJoe:
originally posted by Joel Stewart:
are these "handmade" "vin naturel" winemakers saying their wines released at this level don't stand any chance of lasting, so they implant self-destructive corks to ensure the fact?
it's probly me, but i miss the logic so far.
The logic is that most people don't buy gamay from the Loire to age. In fact, most of the people in this market who do have probably already read this thread. The rest of the people take the wine home and drink it with dinner. Everyone else knows that you don't age wine with fake corks. If you care enough to be aging CRB, you find out which cuvees have real corks. That will then be your clue as to which you should keep.
And TCA is a drag.
I think this is a really good summary. I actually don't have anything against plastic corks per se. In fact, I think they're a very good thing, and wish they were a lot more widely used, for the very wines that Joe is talking about - the wines that get bought by the general public and taken home and drunk. American wines, your basic high volume Spanish wines, Cotes du Rhones, etc. I think the aggregate result will be significantly less overall use of cork. The result of THAT will be less pressure on the cork industry to produce subpar corks. We hopefully will get back to an era of corks that were built for the long haul.
We all want a magic bullet for TCA. I have yet to see it. Plastic doesn't work at all for aging, and I think the screwcap direction is simply going to have its own issues centered around reduction. It is what it is.
I will say that I think plastic corked wine can go downhill pretty darn fast. I even think stuff that's been sitting for a year on a store shelf is a little suspect. I recork em immediately.
Last thing I'll say is that most wines I've found with plastic corks (like the CRB Gamay, or a recent Chermette rose) really do make sense to have plastic corks. But there are others (a ruined case of Christoffel Kabinett being the leading example) I'm just surprised by, and I hope everyone just learns the lesson and moves on. I've appreciated Eric Texier for example adjusting his longer haul cuvees.
In the meantime, I'll continue to check every bottle I buy, including short termers, and recork them if they're plastic. It's quick, easy, and fun. And, incidentally, every recorked wine I've had has been just dandy.