Scott Frank
Scott Frank
do producers insist on using those shit nomo corks? i'm talking to you, awesome french "natural" producers.
stop it.
please.
stop it.
please.
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
Scott, as you say you have trial evidence, have you examined screwtops? It is said that the Aussies have good long-term success with them.
originally posted by Levi Dalton:
Ok, but corked wines are not rare.
I turn back and won't serve 1-4 bottles every evening at the resto. Last night there were two. If we get through a service with no corked bottles it is a surprise. The other night we had 3 bottles of the same wine all show cork taint. That sort of thing can put a crimp in the service flow.
Let's not over-specify what I wrote, 'K?It's well and good the guy that designed them only meant for them to last two years
But the "intent" is rather obviously one in which cork is undesirable but something that does not look like cork (could be screwcap, could be something else) is deemed commercially impossible. See, for example, France. I don't like it, and it made me drink a whole bunch of wines well before their time and dump out a bunch of wines (something like two cases of Texier, for example) that I didn't realize were under synthetic until far too late. But now I pull capsules if I'm suspicious. It's not like I'm flipping these wines.Regardless of the intent a producer has for a wines consumption I think it presents a greater risk than natural cork.
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
Scott, as you say you have trial evidence, have you examined screwtops? It is said that the Aussies have good long-term success with them.
You're the last of the riverboat gamblers. You did a good job with the syrah, I've only tasted a handful of CA pinots that were worth drinking. Wish you luck.originally posted by Florida Jim:
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
Scott, as you say you have trial evidence, have you examined screwtops? It is said that the Aussies have good long-term success with them.
I think it was Kumeu River that I read went back and did their whole library of wines with screwcaps. Leaving aside the problems caused by pulling the original cork and then putting the wines in screwcap-able bottles, it amazed me that anyone had that much faith in the long term performance of screwcaps.
Jamie Goode compares screwcaps to other closures in his book "The Science of Wine" (p. 160-165). Further, on pages 127-128 he addresses the possibility that the tighter seal they provide encourages reduction - no reliable studies as yet to back up that notion but it seems plausible for certain types of wine and especially those with considerable dissolved sulpher.
Steve Edmunds uses screwcaps on some wines and not others - perhaps he can chime in on why.
I use cork for my syrah as I intend it to be aged medium to long term. I have yet to make a decision on what I will close my pinot with - probably cork, if my intent stays the same and the wine gives me reason to believe it will age.
Best, Jim
originally posted by Lou Kessler:
You're the last of the riverboat gamblers. You did a good job with the syrah, I've only tasted a handful of CA pinots that were worth drinking. Wish you luck.
he's calling your bluff, Lou!originally posted by Florida Jim:
originally posted by Lou Kessler:
You're the last of the riverboat gamblers. You did a good job with the syrah, I've only tasted a handful of CA pinots that were worth drinking. Wish you luck.
Lou,
At this age, gamble is most of what I got.
Best, Jim