D. Zylberberg
David Zylberberg
So I had an odd experience over the weekend. Cracked a bottle of 2009 Clos Saron Pinot Noir Home Vineyard. Delicious stuff - and I say that as a deep skeptic of CA pinot.
BUT, and this is a big but - the wine madeirized overnight.
I have never seen anything like this before and I've opened (and kept overnight) 100's of wines. Bought at retail around noon, popped it around 6PM, used an inert gas canister to keep the wine, poured a second (generous)glass at around 9PM, refilled the empty space from the gas canister, went to sleep.
Popped the bottle around noon the next day. The remaining ~third wasn't volatile or "dead" - that happens all the time on day 2. It was, rather, clearly madeirized, with strong nutty notes of oxidation.
I can't remember this happening with a white, let alone a red which, in theory, should be able to stand up to 18 hours of light oxygen exposure. In view of the premox debacle, I wonder if there's some odd flaw here.
BUT, and this is a big but - the wine madeirized overnight.
I have never seen anything like this before and I've opened (and kept overnight) 100's of wines. Bought at retail around noon, popped it around 6PM, used an inert gas canister to keep the wine, poured a second (generous)glass at around 9PM, refilled the empty space from the gas canister, went to sleep.
Popped the bottle around noon the next day. The remaining ~third wasn't volatile or "dead" - that happens all the time on day 2. It was, rather, clearly madeirized, with strong nutty notes of oxidation.
I can't remember this happening with a white, let alone a red which, in theory, should be able to stand up to 18 hours of light oxygen exposure. In view of the premox debacle, I wonder if there's some odd flaw here.