Ian Fitzsimmons
Ian Fitzsimmons
I took delivery this week of a couple of bottles of wine produced by Ponsot. The labels extended an extra half-inch or so the right (facing the bottle), where a small white circle is featured, surrounded by text in French and English saying that, if the circle were dark gray, the wine had been exposed to an excessively high temperature.
I checked on the Ponsot website for more details, but didn't find any (by the way, it's a well-conceived site and worth a tour). Who among you wise cognoscenti know more about this technical innovation? It strikes me as a very appealing feature, and I wonder what kind of additional cost per bottle it entails.
I have to think that most shippers and distributors (Joe & Co. excepted) would abominate labels like this and put pressure on producers not to use them.
Very tenuously related, I wonder if there are any flexible thermometers on the market that you can lay on the bottle to take it's temperature, rather than the ambient air temperature. I've seen something like this that you can lay on kids' foreheads, but don't recall whether they are graded finely enough to use for wines.
I checked on the Ponsot website for more details, but didn't find any (by the way, it's a well-conceived site and worth a tour). Who among you wise cognoscenti know more about this technical innovation? It strikes me as a very appealing feature, and I wonder what kind of additional cost per bottle it entails.
I have to think that most shippers and distributors (Joe & Co. excepted) would abominate labels like this and put pressure on producers not to use them.
Very tenuously related, I wonder if there are any flexible thermometers on the market that you can lay on the bottle to take it's temperature, rather than the ambient air temperature. I've seen something like this that you can lay on kids' foreheads, but don't recall whether they are graded finely enough to use for wines.