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originally posted by richard slicker:
i assume that means he is using the lalique/suckling 1000 points! bottles.
or else he is fucked.
fb.
no, but the bottles can only be manufactured during full moon
originally posted by richard slicker:
i assume that means he is using the lalique/suckling 1000 points! bottles.
or else he is fucked.
fb.
originally posted by nigel groundwater:
Oswaldooriginally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
Anyone know how this ardeaseal thingy works and how it avoids the usual plastic cork woes?
This:
Loading…
ardeaseal.com
will hopefully give you what you want with Ponsot himself explaining it.
A key issue for ensuring its performance is that specialist equipment is required for its insertion and failure to do it properly can cause [serious] problems.
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
Despite pro-Ponsot bias, the explanation did not persuade, and (with all due respect) may be reason to avoid these bottlings. He starts by saying that natural cork oxygenates "randomly" and he wants a closure that will oxygenate "with regularity." I wonder how one chooses the desirable rate, assuming it's not, as some here believe, zero.
The problem with plastic corks, afaik, is that the sponginess is inferior and the sealing pressure of the smooth plastic surface against the glass is lower, making it more permeable. There is no discussion here about why this particular plastic cork would pressure the glass any better, and I don't see how the rigid frame or medical grade plastic tip is going to make it tighter. At worst, this could be a train wreck in the making, one of those that later seems predictable in hindsight. Time to start drinking Domaine des Chezeaux.
I think it's also bundled inside one of their no-signup-required docs, starting at p.7: clickoriginally posted by Oliver McCrum:
...click on 'white paper.'
originally posted by Chris Coad:
My rate of corked wines has quite literally been reduced by three-quarters over the last five years, going from between 7-8% in the mid-2000s to around 2% now, or even just a little shy of that.
Mostly, I suspect, because a lot of our daily wines now have screwcaps or plastic corks.
originally posted by nigel groundwater:
originally posted by Chris Coad:
My rate of corked wines has quite literally been reduced by three-quarters over the last five years, going from between 7-8% in the mid-2000s to around 2% now, or even just a little shy of that.
Mostly, I suspect, because a lot of our daily wines now have screwcaps or plastic corks.
A percentage 'corked' rate presumably only has real meaning [in cork terms] if the sample relates only to cork-closed wines. Even then individual experiences will vary due to the random distribution of TCA-affected bottles and large variances in individual thresholds.
However if there is a major change in the ratio of non-cork closed bottles to cork-closed bottles consumed over the periods being compared the perception of an overall reduction could be pretty meaningless in terms of TCA in cork generally since one might reasonably assume that non-cork-closed wines would [almost always] be TCA-free.
The major change in TCA in cork, particularly for people below the norm of TCA recognition and detection thresholds, is likely to have started to become obvious for vintages from the second half of the last decade [e.g. 94% with less than 2ppt of which 76% had less than 1 ppt in 2006] and for super-sensitives more recently than that [e.g. 98% had less than 2ppt of which 94% had less than 1ppt in 2010]. For those above the average threshold the change would have started earlier than 2006.
If individual consumption continues to include a significant number of bottles from the 80s and the 90s [particularly] the occurrence of % of TCA bottles experienced will tend to have been sustained at higher levels.
Claude specifically referred to "current releases" in his originating post of this thread when he referred to +/- 1% versus 8-10% 10-12 years ago. So if posts do not relate to fairly recent vintages of cork-closed wines the figures given are not going to be meaningfully comparable.
And if non-cork-closed wines are included and constitute an increased proportion in the calculation/estimate/guesstimate of %TCA experienced recently the 'dilution' by the inclusion of such non-cork-closed wines would tend to have the opposite effect of any bottles from the 80s and 90s.
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
< giggle >
Ah I see. You suspect you, personally, may not have seen a significant reduction in TCA in cork closed wines even in recent vintages? WaBoFWoriginally posted by Chris Coad:
originally posted by nigel groundwater:
originally posted by Chris Coad:
My rate of corked wines has quite literally been reduced by three-quarters over the last five years, going from between 7-8% in the mid-2000s to around 2% now, or even just a little shy of that.
Mostly, I suspect, because a lot of our daily wines now have screwcaps or plastic corks.
A percentage 'corked' rate presumably only has real meaning [in cork terms] if the sample relates only to cork-closed wines. Even then individual experiences will vary due to the random distribution of TCA-affected bottles and large variances in individual thresholds.
However if there is a major change in the ratio of non-cork closed bottles to cork-closed bottles consumed over the periods being compared the perception of an overall reduction could be pretty meaningless in terms of TCA in cork generally since one might reasonably assume that non-cork-closed wines would [almost always] be TCA-free.
The major change in TCA in cork, particularly for people below the norm of TCA recognition and detection thresholds, is likely to have started to become obvious for vintages from the second half of the last decade [e.g. 94% with less than 2ppt of which 76% had less than 1 ppt in 2006] and for super-sensitives more recently than that [e.g. 98% had less than 2ppt of which 94% had less than 1ppt in 2010]. For those above the average threshold the change would have started earlier than 2006.
If individual consumption continues to include a significant number of bottles from the 80s and the 90s [particularly] the occurrence of % of TCA bottles experienced will tend to have been sustained at higher levels.
Claude specifically referred to "current releases" in his originating post of this thread when he referred to +/- 1% versus 8-10% 10-12 years ago. So if posts do not relate to fairly recent vintages of cork-closed wines the figures given are not going to be meaningfully comparable.
And if non-cork-closed wines are included and constitute an increased proportion in the calculation/estimate/guesstimate of %TCA experienced recently the 'dilution' by the inclusion of such non-cork-closed wines would tend to have the opposite effect of any bottles from the 80s and 90s.
Precisely.
originally posted by nigel groundwater:
Ah I see. You suspect you, personally, may not have seen a significant reduction in TCA in cork closed wines even in recent vintages? WaBoFWoriginally posted by Chris Coad:
originally posted by nigel groundwater:
originally posted by Chris Coad:
My rate of corked wines has quite literally been reduced by three-quarters over the last five years, going from between 7-8% in the mid-2000s to around 2% now, or even just a little shy of that.
Mostly, I suspect, because a lot of our daily wines now have screwcaps or plastic corks.
A percentage 'corked' rate presumably only has real meaning [in cork terms] if the sample relates only to cork-closed wines. Even then individual experiences will vary due to the random distribution of TCA-affected bottles and large variances in individual thresholds.
However if there is a major change in the ratio of non-cork closed bottles to cork-closed bottles consumed over the periods being compared the perception of an overall reduction could be pretty meaningless in terms of TCA in cork generally since one might reasonably assume that non-cork-closed wines would [almost always] be TCA-free.
The major change in TCA in cork, particularly for people below the norm of TCA recognition and detection thresholds, is likely to have started to become obvious for vintages from the second half of the last decade [e.g. 94% with less than 2ppt of which 76% had less than 1 ppt in 2006] and for super-sensitives more recently than that [e.g. 98% had less than 2ppt of which 94% had less than 1ppt in 2010]. For those above the average threshold the change would have started earlier than 2006.
If individual consumption continues to include a significant number of bottles from the 80s and the 90s [particularly] the occurrence of % of TCA bottles experienced will tend to have been sustained at higher levels.
Claude specifically referred to "current releases" in his originating post of this thread when he referred to +/- 1% versus 8-10% 10-12 years ago. So if posts do not relate to fairly recent vintages of cork-closed wines the figures given are not going to be meaningfully comparable.
And if non-cork-closed wines are included and constitute an increased proportion in the calculation/estimate/guesstimate of %TCA experienced recently the 'dilution' by the inclusion of such non-cork-closed wines would tend to have the opposite effect of any bottles from the 80s and 90s.
Precisely.
No apologies due except possibly from me for wasting time. I had thought that, just maybe, it was worth trying to see if there was some sort of internally coherent consensus here with rational qualifications based on Claude Kolm’s initial post.originally posted by Chris Coad:
originally posted by nigel groundwater:
Ah I see. You suspect you, personally, may not have seen a significant reduction in TCA in cork closed wines even in recent vintages? WaBoFWoriginally posted by Chris Coad:
originally posted by nigel groundwater:
originally posted by Chris Coad:
My rate of corked wines has quite literally been reduced by three-quarters over the last five years, going from between 7-8% in the mid-2000s to around 2% now, or even just a little shy of that.
Mostly, I suspect, because a lot of our daily wines now have screwcaps or plastic corks.
A percentage 'corked' rate presumably only has real meaning [in cork terms] if the sample relates only to cork-closed wines. Even then individual experiences will vary due to the random distribution of TCA-affected bottles and large variances in individual thresholds.
However if there is a major change in the ratio of non-cork closed bottles to cork-closed bottles consumed over the periods being compared the perception of an overall reduction could be pretty meaningless in terms of TCA in cork generally since one might reasonably assume that non-cork-closed wines would [almost always] be TCA-free.
The major change in TCA in cork, particularly for people below the norm of TCA recognition and detection thresholds, is likely to have started to become obvious for vintages from the second half of the last decade [e.g. 94% with less than 2ppt of which 76% had less than 1 ppt in 2006] and for super-sensitives more recently than that [e.g. 98% had less than 2ppt of which 94% had less than 1ppt in 2010]. For those above the average threshold the change would have started earlier than 2006.
If individual consumption continues to include a significant number of bottles from the 80s and the 90s [particularly] the occurrence of % of TCA bottles experienced will tend to have been sustained at higher levels.
Claude specifically referred to "current releases" in his originating post of this thread when he referred to +/- 1% versus 8-10% 10-12 years ago. So if posts do not relate to fairly recent vintages of cork-closed wines the figures given are not going to be meaningfully comparable.
And if non-cork-closed wines are included and constitute an increased proportion in the calculation/estimate/guesstimate of %TCA experienced recently the 'dilution' by the inclusion of such non-cork-closed wines would tend to have the opposite effect of any bottles from the 80s and 90s.
Precisely.
Was I unclear?
If so, I apologize. I thought our similar conclusions were basically one and the same.
I did play WaBoFW in a gamers' guild in the early 2010s, but my Paladin Archmage half-elf met with an early demise, sad to say. RIP, but she lives on in memory.
originally posted by richard slicker:
i have had 6 bottles of corked screw cap wine
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
originally posted by richard slicker:
i have had 6 bottles of corked screw cap wine
OTOH, my last 6 bottles of screw capped cork wine were by definition problem free.
originally posted by mark e:
Screw caps are not *by definition* problem free. Though the wine is TCA-free, there have been issues with mercaptans and other off-odors in the not-too-recent past.
originally posted by .sasha:
originally posted by mark e:
Screw caps are not *by definition* problem free. Though the wine is TCA-free, there have been issues with mercaptans and other off-odors in the not-too-recent past.
the exponential one -
I suspect these aromatic complications, which should be about as obvious as TCA...
originally posted by Brad Kane:
originally posted by .sasha:
originally posted by mark e:
Screw caps are not *by definition* problem free. Though the wine is TCA-free, there have been issues with mercaptans and other off-odors in the not-too-recent past.
the exponential one -
I suspect these aromatic complications, which should be about as obvious as TCA...
Hearing you say "as obvious as tca" is funny. Tee hee!