I will put it on my Christmas list!originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
Copper-lined decanter?
I'm no great expert, but I have a notion that wines that are that far gone in reduction don't age well.originally posted by MarkS:
Perhaps you just drank it too young?
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
So, stupid ridicule-inviting question: what are reductive flavors/aromas like?
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
Is the aroma caused by gaseous fermentation products dissolving back into the must, reacting with, perhaps, the S02 routinely used in vinification?
I have a feeling this topic's been hashed out before, so I'll search for prior explanations if it's complicated.
originally posted by SFJoe:
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
Is the aroma caused by gaseous fermentation products dissolving back into the must, reacting with, perhaps, the S02 routinely used in vinification?
I have a feeling this topic's been hashed out before, so I'll search for prior explanations if it's complicated.
I'm not sure it has. The H2S and other thiols are natural fermentation products, I suppose mostly derived from cysteine and so on. Amount depends on a lot of things--variety, soil, nutrients in fermentation, screwcap or no, etc. etc.
The general solution AFAIK is to catch the problem during elevage and rack the wine, oxidizing the thiols to less smelly things. In extreme cases you can treat with copper.
Agreed.originally posted by MLipton:
originally posted by SFJoe:
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
Is the aroma caused by gaseous fermentation products dissolving back into the must, reacting with, perhaps, the S02 routinely used in vinification?
I have a feeling this topic's been hashed out before, so I'll search for prior explanations if it's complicated.
I'm not sure it has. The H2S and other thiols are natural fermentation products, I suppose mostly derived from cysteine and so on. Amount depends on a lot of things--variety, soil, nutrients in fermentation, screwcap or no, etc. etc.
The general solution AFAIK is to catch the problem during elevage and rack the wine, oxidizing the thiols to less smelly things. In extreme cases you can treat with copper.
I see no reason to absolve SO2 of involvement in the problem. Some of the H2S could arise from yeasts reducing bisulfite through mechanism or mechanisms unknown. I realize that it's lethal to yeast, but some chemistry can happen before the eventual release from this mortal coil, and enzymatic activity can continue postmortem.
originally posted by Brézème:
Well it is very easy to get rotten eggs reduction aromas without any SO2!
Just make ferment bourbes (gross lees resulting of cold stabulation).
Nasty, really.
I am perplexed by the production of molecular hydrogen, H2. Do you have a reference?originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
I've just been doing some research (not very sophisticated) on metabolisms and see H2 shown as a sometimes fermentation product, but not S, hence my surmise that the SO2 is implicated. It looks as the the H2 would be produced by the malo-lactic fermentation, at least for the most part, rather than the alcoholic.
I'd venture a guess that the affect on the wine's aromas results from fermentation in a closed airspace, where, as gaseous H2 concentration accumulates in the confined space above the liquid surface, and its partial pressure builds, outgassing of the H2 generated subsequently is impeded, causing a portion of it to remain dissolved in the solution. So racking would solve it, as you say, if this outline of the process is in the ballpark.
Thanks.