There are murmurings that this wine is now flat due to the plastic closure.
originally posted by Chris Coad:
Perhaps we can come together and settle on another wine or two whose sins will more plausibly fit the agreed-upon suspects?
originally posted by Todd Abrams:
originally posted by Chris Coad:
Perhaps we can come together and settle on another wine or two whose sins will more plausibly fit the agreed-upon suspects?
Im not trying to fabricate a controversy here. I swear.
originally posted by SFJoe:
Very curious to find reduction problems under a leaky closure.
It's hard to keep free thiols if you trickle in oxygen.originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by SFJoe:
Very curious to find reduction problems under a leaky closure.
Why would the closure have anything to do with a reduction problem in the wine?
To me, it smacks of reduction, but it could be brett, I suppose, that seems to be the catch-all these days.
Suffice to say, there is something wrong with my bottles and there always has been.
Why would the closure have anything to do with a reduction problem in the wine?
Sure, but this one is fake cork, which should give you the opposite problem.originally posted by Thor:
Why would the closure have anything to do with a reduction problem in the wine?
Hasn't this been the question regarding screwcaps? See, for example, Jamie Goode's work on this point.
Sure, but this one is fake cork, which should give you the opposite problem.