Peter Creasey
Peter Creasey
originally posted by Kay Bixler: I read the article and thought wow, this guy really has it all figured out, and I'll bet a lot of others did as well.
Kay, As evidenced by online discussions elsewhere.
. . . . . Pete
originally posted by Kay Bixler: I read the article and thought wow, this guy really has it all figured out, and I'll bet a lot of others did as well.
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
This could be a useful discussion, if anyone still has the patience. I thought sweetness decreased with age, but not acidity. I would expect an old riesling to have lost much of its fruit (perhaps gaining in other secondary aspects), but not its acidity. And there may be a distinction to be made between tartaric acid additions that precipitate and natural acidity.
originally posted by MLipton:
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
This could be a useful discussion, if anyone still has the patience. I thought sweetness decreased with age, but not acidity. I would expect an old riesling to have lost much of its fruit (perhaps gaining in other secondary aspects), but not its acidity. And there may be a distinction to be made between tartaric acid additions that precipitate and natural acidity.
Oswaldo,
What about Savennieres, Chablis and Muscadets that can seem shrill in their youth yet become rounder with age. Indeed, what does rounder mean if not less acidic?
Mark Lipton
originally posted by MLipton:
On a different front, how do you all feel about his assertion that acidity doesn't decrease with age, but minerality does? It seems to me that most wines get demonstrably less acidic as they age.
Mark Lipton
I feel like a guy who has consumed several tankers of Trimbach could only feel: what, now?On a different front, how do you all feel about his assertion that acidity doesn't decrease with age, but minerality does?
originally posted by SFJoe:
The equilibrium will be established faster in lower pH wines, and probably also in sweet wines and wines with high alcohol.
originally posted by Thor:
I feel like a guy who has consumed several tankers of Trimbach could only feel: what, now?On a different front, how do you all feel about his assertion that acidity doesn't decrease with age, but minerality does?
Here we disagree.originally posted by Morgan Harris:
from a hard grams of TA/liter point doesn't really change...
originally posted by SFJoe:
Here we disagree.originally posted by Morgan Harris:
from a hard grams of TA/liter point doesn't really change...
originally posted by Kevin Roberts:
Rate constants! I'm so excited!
And yes, VLM, this was the subject of the napkin at Pinon's house.originally posted by Kevin Roberts:
"The production of ethyl acid tartrate in aged wines is sufficient to decrease the sensory acidity and apparent harshness and thus have a mellowing effect."
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
I have an ISI Web of Knowledge subscription through UVA and can't get in either. Bugger.
I'll let you scan it visually first. If you think there is good stuff to be seen, I'd be glad of a copy.originally posted by MLipton:
If any of you all want it, PM me and I'll scan a copy for you.
originally posted by SFJoe:
I'll let you scan it visually first. If you think there is good stuff to be seen, I'd be glad of a copy.originally posted by MLipton:
If any of you all want it, PM me and I'll scan a copy for you.
I see so few rate constants these days.
Though I was in a company presentation recently and had to tell the CEO that he had mixed his rate constants for his therapeutic antibody binding its target. He didn't know the diff between 1st and 2nd order rate constants, can you imagine?
Do you think we got the deal?