Wine Forums - Wineography
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?
February 09, 2012, 04:15:48 PM

Login with username, password and session length
Search:     Advanced search
Welcome to Wineography's wine forums for connoisseurs to beginners!
962 Posts in 677 Topics by 388 Members
Latest Member: dorncemnene
* Home Help Search Login Register
Wine Forums - Wineography  |  Wine Forums  |  Wine Related Topics (Moderator: wineo)  |  Topic: Cork or screw cap? « previous next »
Pages: 1 [2] Print
Author Topic: Cork or screw cap?  (Read 12192 times)
san4os
Wine-a-bee
*
Offline Offline

Posts: 1



« Reply #15 on: November 06, 2009, 10:54:57 PM »

it's doubtless - CORK!!!

it is  so romantik when you open a bottle of wine with corkscrew! Just imagine: your girlfriend and the moon!!! =)
Logged

winesecrets
Quaffer
***
Offline Offline

Posts: 16



« Reply #16 on: November 25, 2009, 04:25:28 AM »

You will find this article useful (from: http://www.stormhoek.com/blog/index.php/2008/01/31/cork-vs-screw-cap-debate/comment-page-1/)

One of the questions I seem to be asked all the time is “Why use screw caps instead of cork”. Most people seem to associate cork with expensive wine and screw caps with cheap wine, this may have been true 20 or so years ago in the States, but now a days some of the best vineyards in the world are bottling their wines with screw caps. Why?

Well over the last couple of centuries the wine industry has been using more and more cork, however as cork is harvested from trees that are approximately 6 to 9 years old the supply has not managed to keep up with the demand, this has led to a much higher use of pesticides and wood preservatives to get the cork ready sooner. These treatments on the trees are what most people are pointing at to account for the large increase in corked wine.

Corked wine is basically wine that smells and tastes undesirable and the main cause is bad corks. The way this happens is that chemicals (mainly TCA) that can be found in the cork react negatively with the wine and cause the wine to smell and taste bad. If you look at the percentage of wine that is corked you will see the figures sometimes go up to 15%, can you imagine any other industry where this amount of fail rate would be accepted, I doubt it.

Screw caps on the other hand have an almost 0 fail rate (we have been using them since 2004 on our wines and have had no negative feedback), they can also be recycled easily, and have been used to age wine now for many years, even producers in Champagne have aged their wines with screw caps with no told negative impact (most wine is consumed within 24 hours of being bought off the shelf anyway)

For this reason you will find the vast majority of our wine is bottled with screw caps, but if your still keen to use a cork screw, for the meantime you will be pleased to find we still use cork on our reserve range of wines.

(If anyone is wondering about plastic corks they aren’t  great as they are not a memory material so you cant age wine with plastic well, and it can still react negatively with the wine due to the chemicals in the plastic. Also they are very un-eco-friendly)
Logged
hazelg
Quaffer
***
Offline Offline

Posts: 22



« Reply #17 on: June 05, 2010, 08:30:22 AM »

it's doubtless - CORK!!!

it is  so romantik when you open a bottle of wine with corkscrew! Just imagine: your girlfriend and the moon!!! =)

What a very inspiring imagination...

lols
Logged
Pages: 1 [2] Print 
Wine Forums - Wineography  |  Wine Forums  |  Wine Related Topics (Moderator: wineo)  |  Topic: Cork or screw cap? « previous next »
Jump to:  

© 2004 - 2012 Wineography | Winery Directory Powered by SMF 1.1.16 | SMF © 2006-2007, Simple Machines Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!