originally posted by Ned Hoey:
I finally got around to emailing FC to inquire about the nomacorcs. Here is the response:
Dear Ned,
After 9 (only; I know) years of working with corks, and being a fan of
natural cork, I have started to notice that natural cork isn't the best
closure of a bottle. Why?
First of all, I see that not all bottles close perfectly, compared to the
synthetic corks I am using now on Contadino and MunJebel.
As we press the corks into the bottle with a manual leverage and not
mechanical, I, we who "cork" bottles, literally feel that there is an
enormous difference in consistency of natural cork when compressing the
material before pressing it into the bottle.
Natural cork suppliers continue to spread the word of the fine material
natural cork is. And they are right up to some point.
What these companies leave out is that, in order to find GOOD, CONSISTETLY
ELASTIC cork, one has to select thoroughly and this is becomming very
difficult as it requires skilled personel, it is very cost intensive and
request for quality cork is higher than the offerings... And so the
selecting is not done anymore, except for some small batches of super
selected corks of a length of 50mm and longer. But these have a prohibitive
price level which cannot be used for base or medium range wines (we are
talking 1,30- to 1,50- euro per each cork!!!).
And so, I have become rightously so very dissapointed with natural cork
quality as I simply want a good closure!
If I could, I would have wanted to use screwcaps, but here I have a problem
with consistent supply as this is a type of closure/bottle that doesn't have
request in Italy... a mentality issue over here.
I have searched and chosen for my base and medium range of wines for a super
quality of synthetic closure, which I found after some years of testing (I
have been testing before applying these in my production) in Nomacork
Premium. On top of this, the "premium" quality is guaranteed 5 years of
perfect closure. And I believe this as tasting the wines, they have more
consistency than natural corks.
But beware: not all plastic is "fantastic"! Just like natural cork has
quality differences, also plastics have.
As for Magma, I am still using the natural super-quality corks, paying the
crazy prices as here I find the consistent quality of material density,
specific weight and elasticity required to close perfectly the bottle. On
top of that, these corks are sterilized in some "nuclear-scientific" lab in
the city of Bergamo before being shipped to me...
And still we deselect on 500 of these corks some 10-15 pieces out which we
feel are not OK. Still 2,5% of flaw at this price level!
And when it come to guarantees, the supplier of these corks doesn't even
give this for the super quality corks I am buying for Magma...
Hope this gives you a good answer in this complex bottle-closure issue.
Happy end of the year!
Frank