Ugh, my most hated thing...........
Why do you do that?
Because that's the way its always been
gamby wrote:02Pilot wrote:I'm trying to learn more about wine, but I'm nowhere near that consumption rate. I hope you've developed an awesome palate as a result.MadScientistMatt wrote:As someone who takes part in the consumption of probably a good 25-30 cases of wine a year (meaning opening and consuming a portion of some 300-360 bottles), either I'm very, very lucky, or that one in twelve number is ridiculously overstated.ditchdigger wrote: Cork is a crappy sealant. The wine industry has wanted to move to screw caps for the last 4 decades but tradition and the idea that screw tops=cheap wine have stopped them. They attempted synthetic corks and rubber coated corks and other ways to make their product taste better and last longer, but still appeal to traditionalists but a screw top still wins. Cheap, sterile, recloseable and mass production friendly. Tradition is very rarely a good reason to do, or continue to do anything.One guide to wine claims that corks have a failure rate that is often as high as one in 12 at avoiding corkiness or leakage. That's an insane failure rate for any other industry to put up with.
Not too bad, but far from great. I can identify varietal, region, and conditions more often than not, but I'm not good enough to have regional vintage conditions at my fingertips, nor is my palate developed enough to pick out some of the more subtle characteristics.
It helps to have immediate family in the business (on the importing side), and a lot of tasting opportunities as well.
z31maniac wrote: Ugh, my most hated thing........... Why do you do that? Because that's the way its always been
Agreed.
for hotel room/roadside consumption, screw top FTW.
definitely has influenced my vino purchases more than once - dig through stuff for the opener and do more work or twist & pour & get on with it already.
for that reason alone I purchase more Fisheye than I want to...
carguy123 wrote: China doesn't grow cork.
Well it balances out because the wine they make is bloody terrible, it is literally undrinkable. "Great Wall" brand would be the biggest and it's a shocker, all of them.
Besides that, they don't have a wine culture either, you quite commonly see hero's in bars skulling beer glasses of red wine!
It however is a huge growing market being targeted heavily by French and Australian wine makers.
Volksrodden wrote: The other night my girlfriend and I where enjoying our one year anniversary. As we where doing this we stop and pick up some wine. The same wine we enjoyed the year befor, much to our dismay there was no cork. I have notice the selection of wine is getting smaller. So does the GRM brain trust have any answers?
I dunno, almost all the beer I buy comes in corked bottles.
02Pilot wrote: As someone who takes part in the consumption of probably a good 25-30 cases of wine a year (meaning opening and consuming a portion of some 300-360 bottles), either I'm very, very lucky, or that one in twelve number is ridiculously overstated.
The number gave me pause too. Perhaps they included air leaks that had a relatively small effect on the taste of the wine or otherwise had a low definition of failure.
SyntheticBlinkerFluid wrote: I heard there is a cork shortage as well. Apparently there has been a rise in cork recycling which I didn't even know could be recycled.
Cork recycling? That's where I give my dog the cork once the bottle is opened. He recycles them back to the earth.
Cork failure rate is typically under 5%. Last numbers I saw in peer review said about 3%. A winemaker I was chatting with said about the same. He uses screw caps which have a failure rate of about 0.01% (according to him, I don't have numbers).
Tradition is great, but I'd rather protect my wine as best as possible.
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