JamieBahrain wrote:
- cork outperforms seemingly backward, strangled wines under SC. that's my issue the blind freddy approach to sc by some wineries may be a huge issue .
- Time may not heal winemaking or bottling errors under screw cap. The lag in evolution between fruit and structure is plain odd.
Some very interesting discussion as always on this topic. A few thoughts of my own, in particular response to these two comments by Jamie.
In terms of screw cap leaving wines backwards, I would have thought this unsurprising and reflective of a lower level of oxygen ingress is allowing wines to stay fresher and more closed longer in bottles under screw cap. To me, this sounds like ideal packaging to allow long-term storage of wine.
I am not convinced that wine under screw cap will show NO development, even over say twenty years. My experience of screw cap wines of 5-10yrs indicates distinctive development just with far less evidence of detractive oxidation/tertiary characters developing and a greater level of "freshness" (consistent with many other comments here, and a descriptor I would rarely see as a negative).
For shorter-term cellaring, I imagine the downside of this- a more "closed" wine on first opening- could be substantially ameliorated by a more robust decant than might be applied to a similar wine under cork (as Gary's French experiment suggests).
In terms of the argument that this means a wine that suffered initially from reduction will always do so, or Jamie's comment that under screw cap "time may not heal winemaking or bottling errors"... Umm, why are you wanting to buy faulty wine in the first place?
In this example, all the screw cap is doing is allowing you to see the faults in the wine which previously were masked by or falsely attributed to the bark stopper. In this sense, as others have said, the screw cap is allowing the wine to more accurately and consistently express the intent of its maker and its source of origin, rather than the vagaries of packaging and storage.