Ian Fitzsimmons
Ian Fitzsimmons
My head hurts.
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
My head hurts.
originally posted by nigel groundwater:
TCA in wine is not very volatile at cellar/room temperature so very low levels of TCA infection, temperature increases, aeration and of course time in the glass will encourage the molecules into the sensing zone in sufficient quantity to be smelled when individual thresholds are reached.
originally posted by MLipton:
originally posted by nigel groundwater:
TCA in wine is not very volatile at cellar/room temperature so very low levels of TCA infection, temperature increases, aeration and of course time in the glass will encourage the molecules into the sensing zone in sufficient quantity to be smelled when individual thresholds are reached.
No, I am afraid that this is incorrect, Nigel. TCA in the headspace of glass reaches its equilibrium state quickly. Because of its phenomenally low partial pressure, there's never much present. So why does TCA become more apparent with time? Because it's so non-volatile, other smells initally present and that may possibly mask the smell of TCA are depleted through evaporation, thereby effectively enriching the amount of TCA. In the extreme, if one were to leave the bottle of wine uncorked for a month, most of its contents will have evaporated, leaving only the solids (which includes the TCA).
Mark Lipton
Chemopedant
originally posted by Florida Jim:
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
Claude, with all due respect, while it is not as rude as an epiteth, to say that something has diminished one's respect for someone is so hurtful that I don't think it should be said.
Epitaphs are very hurtful but I respect anyone who can right them aloud, even if there roodness is undiminshed.
Bset, Jim
originally posted by Kay Bixler:
originally posted by Chris Coad:
Your petulant insistence on couching things in shades of gray has considerably diminished my respect for Brad Kane.
Chris, your diminished respect for Brad Kane has elevated my respect for cilantro.
It depends how the 'slightly corked wine' is perceived. If it is 'slightly corked' for a 5 parts/trillion threshold it wouldn't be noticed by a 20 ppt threshold or the many wine drinkers with substantially higher thresholds. One man's poison can still be another's meat.originally posted by VLM:
TCA
For what it's worth, TCA is a 1/0 thing for me. I've never understood people that could drink a "slightly corked" wine.
I don't get physically ill, I'm too revolted to go near.
Joe I guess we all have our anecdotal stories about TCA and the times there have been arguments over whether a wine is corked or not. As I have said I believe that is primarily a function of different individual thresholds although experience plays a part; sometimes to excess IMO. Which is why reported individual experience of corked wines varies in forums from 1-2% right up to 20-25% on a continous basis.originally posted by SFJoe:
Nigel,
It's my empirical experience that TCA equilibrates a bit (seconds-minutes) more slowly into the headspace than other more volatile things.
I find TCA more obvious above an unswirled glass--I think masking odorants evaporate more efficiently on swirling and confuse the assessment.
o
However TCA is non-volatile as stated but doesn't that affect the rate at which it reaches its equilibrium state and wouldn't temperature have some effect on that equilibrium and the rate it is achieved. Since people sense TCA at very different thresholds are you saying that time in the glass [during which temperature is increasing unless the wine begins at the same temperature it ends at] is not a significant factor. You say 'quickly' so could you indicate roughly what that might be?
And what other normal smells [I could understand brett or SLO] might mask TCA. Are you saying that because of the "phenomenally low partial pressure" the amount of TCA in the glass headspace is independent of the concentration in the glass or are you are saying that the time taken to reach equilibrium is independent of concentration and temperature? I assume it is not the former but wonder about the latter.
And wouldn't these volatile smells continue since, while evaporating, would they not be replaced? Why would these other smells be depleted so quickly without replacement thereby effectively enriching the amount of TCA in what remains - quickly?
Could this be characterised as you saying "the same amount of TCA, quickly present remains but other volatile elements have been depleted and not replaced in the headspace making TCA molecules a more dominant and therefore detectable presence"?
The effects of oxidation are known to mask TCA but they should be minimal in a newly opened wine. I would be interested to learn what other aspects of wine chemistry might have that masking effect and yet disappear quickly from the headspace thereby revealing the TCA to those with lower thresholds than its concentration.
Thanks for the link, Joe. All the while that I was reading it, I kept on thinking of the Ken Auletta article/later book on Lehman, and then lo and behold, there it was mentioned near the bottom.
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
With due respect, I'm going home to diminish a bottle of Granite de Clisson.
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
In the federal courts and every state in the union except Maryland, which is considered a great anomaly, juries are limited to questions of fact. Questions of law are always decided by judges. They instruct the juries what they can consider and what they cannot and how much weight they are to accord to the factual evidence and how the law applies. Oh, and by the way, judges have the power to overrule a jury's verdict. Jonathan, I'm sorry, but you've really diminished my respect for you by this thread and your ridiculous arguments.originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
For good reasons, lawyers don't find people guilty, juries do.
Kirk to the contrary notwithstanding, Martha Stewart was originally brought under suspicion and was questioned because she was alleged to have sold shares in a drug company when her friend, who was the president of the company told her, prior to the reporting in the news, that the drug had been rejected by someone or another. This is insider trading. It is what they could not prove and instead charged her with obstructing justice in the sense of obstructing the case they were unable to prove, by lying under oath. If I had been a member of that jury, I would have had to vote to find her guilty, but I wouldn't have liked it.
originally posted by kirk wallace:
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
In the federal courts and every state in the union except Maryland, which is considered a great anomaly, juries are limited to questions of fact. Questions of law are always decided by judges. They instruct the juries what they can consider and what they cannot and how much weight they are to accord to the factual evidence and how the law applies. Oh, and by the way, judges have the power to overrule a jury's verdict. Jonathan, I'm sorry, but you've really diminished my respect for you by this thread and your ridiculous arguments.originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
For good reasons, lawyers don't find people guilty, juries do.
Kirk to the contrary notwithstanding, Martha Stewart was originally brought under suspicion and was questioned because she was alleged to have sold shares in a drug company when her friend, who was the president of the company told her, prior to the reporting in the news, that the drug had been rejected by someone or another. This is insider trading. It is what they could not prove and instead charged her with obstructing justice in the sense of obstructing the case they were unable to prove, by lying under oath. If I had been a member of that jury, I would have had to vote to find her guilty, but I wouldn't have liked it.
Sorry, Jonathan: you have the facts a bit muddled. Sam Waksal, the CEO on ImClone, tipped his daughter and other family members to sell ahead of the public announcement of the FDA's failure to approve one of ImClone's pending drugs. That is insider trading as to him -- note that his daughter was not charged with a crime. MS's broker was aware of the Waksal sales and was found to have tipped MS about them. MS denied that the broker had told her. She was found (as you note, by a jury) to have lied about that. That is obstrucion of justice; it is not insider trading. She was originally charged with, but not convicted of securities fraud --and indeed the judge threw out that charge before it even went to the jury -- but that securites fraud charge related to her company; not Imclone. If you'd like, see this story.
USA Today, that paragon of journalism, has a nice time line here.
originally posted by Ruben Ramos:
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
With due respect, I'm going home to diminish a bottle of Granite de Clisson.
Ian, the 2005?
originally posted by Steven Spielmann:
Some comments:
- There are some states, such as Michigan, where you can't return alcohol as a matter of law. I don't know if this affects their corked bottle return policies but I suspect it does - if they do it I think they have to do it under the table as it were.