Polymer wrote:That's correct...SC would never develop the same aged profiles that we're used to. That's my assertion anyways..
It isn't that the wine doesn't age..it does, just not in the way we're normally used to it.
If indeed screwcapped wines will not age in the same way as wines sealed under cork, then perhaps people ought to reconsider cellaring screwcap wines. The best Australian wines I’ve had were cork sealed. Therefore I should be glad that almost all my Aussie wines are cork sealed because I wouldn’t want it any other way. [Edit: in that I prefer my wines to age the way I have known them to age rather than for them to age in a yet unknown way. Intellectually speaking, it's not impossible that screwcap wines might age in a favourable way but to use an old adage, better the devil you know, or a bird in hand .......]
Polymer wrote:Nope..this is wrong..look up the latest research on TCA...it doesn't actually have a particular odor..that's what people have believed for a long time but is not right..
http
://www.sciencemag.org/news/2013/09/cork ... -your-nose
https
://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3791788/
It doesn't block your entire sense of smell..but it blocks certain receptors...Like for me, sometimes I actually do get NOTHING from a wine as in completely blocked off, completely stripped of anything...
So whatever left is a mishmash of whatever is leftover that we can smell...So that wet cardboard smell is either something left over from what already exists in the wine but we can't smell/taste it normally or whatever isn't blocked is providing a distorted smell of the wine and we smell it. This might be actually cork smell that is leftover or something that has to do with wood that is leftover that we smell..I don't know. But factually, TCA does not have an odor..
I'm also not saying we can smell these things in the wine without TCA being present..obviously we normally cannot..
Alright, I'll bite. Lets break this down. First of all, it is not only 2,4,6-trichloroanisole (TCA) that is behind cork taint:
"
TCA is the common abbreviation for the chemical compound 2,4,6-trichloroanisole, first identified by a Swiss chemist in 1981, and thought to be the primary cause of cork taint. Other chloroanisole contaminants of wine may include 2,3,4,6-tetrachloroanisole (TeCA) and pentachloroanisole (PCA). Scientists in Bordeaux, France, using gas chromatography and mass spectrometry, have recently isolated another compound, 2,4,6-tribromoanisole (TBA), that similarly ruins wine aromas."
(http
://www.winepros.org/wine101/vincyc-tca.htm)
“
Another haloanisole, 2,4,6-tribromoanisole (2,4,6-TBA) has recently been identified as a similar contributor to wine taint. 2,4,6-TBA was first identified by Pascal Chatonnet* (see my post script) and collaborators in 2004 in French wines. Like 2,4,6-TCA, 2,4,6-TBA causes a musty, mold taint in wine at very low concentrations, but it has the potential to be an even more serious problem to the U.S. wine industry because its precursor (2,4,6- tribromophenol [2,4,6-TBP]) can be found in so many sources commonly used in wineries.”
(https
://www.practicalwinery.com/novdec08/page1.htm)
Lets look at TCA and TBA. As pointed out in the studies you cited, TCA is apparently odourless but interacts and taints wine. TBA also taints wine but is not odourless:
Wikipedia describes the two in this way:
TCA - “
The odor of TCA is not directly perceived. Instead, the molecule distorts the perception of smell by suppressing olfactory signal transduction. The effect occurs at very low concentrations (single parts per trillion), so even very minute amounts of TCA can be detected. It causes unpleasant earthy, musty and moldy aromas.”
TBA - “
Tribromoanisole has a very low odor detection threshold. It is 0.08-0.3 parts per trillion (ppt) in water and 2-6 ppt in wine (or 3.4-7.9 ng/l) so even very minute amounts can be detected. It causes unpleasant earthy, musty and moldy aromas.”
In short, TCA
is odourless but affects our perception of smell, triggering unpleasant earthy, musty, and mouldy aromas. TCB
is not odourless and is detected by the perception of pretty much the same odours. This beggars the question, when we detect these unpleasant odours in a tained wine, are we smelling TCB or is TCA causing us to smell pretty much the same thing?
Since the topic of this thread is TCA (even though we are talking about cork taint and all that it encompasses) lets deal with it. Regardless of whether TCA itself is odourless, it produces an effect that causes our olfactory senses to detect something we would not detect in its absence. We are, I suggest, “detecting” TCA by its presence in wine. In much the same way, we perceive many things in wine that are not in fact there, things like cocoa, minerals and herbs, gooseberries and cut grass, even barnyard and manure. Nobody suggests that any of this stuff is in the wine but we do say we detect those aromas and flavours. I think talking about not being able to detect TCA is pedantic to say the least.
Let me use an analogy that also involves another one of our senses: sight. The rays of the sun are pretty much constant but our perception of the colour of the sun changes by dint of the air in the atmosphere. During the day we see the sun as a bright yellow orb but at sunset we see the sun as orange-red. The same colourless atmosphere has changed our perception. We do not see the colour nor density of the air, but we do perceive it by way of it affecting the rays of the sun. Sure we can catgorically say that we cannot see the atmosphere but we detect it in the way it affects the or distorts the rays of the sun at sunset. In much the same way TCA affects our perception, causing us to detect something other than what is there had there been no interference of our olfactory senses.
Polymer wrote:I've cut a piece of cork from a newish bottle and put it in a glass with water and used another glass of water as a control. The one w/ cork is already getting some color to it...I'm going to leave it for awhile longer...Not great control of variables on this..and I don't have enough water for this to last for too long before it evaporates..but the water is not the same color as the control and that's just a number of hours...
By all means, drink or taste cork or liner soaked water. I'll continue to drink my cellared "cork-soaked" wine.
Cheers .................... Mahmoud.
*Pascal Chantonnet. It was quite the surprise to see his name come up in this context. I had never heard of him before but a few years ago I came across the 2005 Chateau L'Archange, Saint Emilion, and when I asked people on a different forum about this wine I got the following response from a knowledgeable formite who lives in Bordeaux:
"
Pascal Chatonnet is a customer of mine twice over. Once for the family vineyards (the most well-known are Haut-Chaigneau and La Serge in Lalande-de-Pomerol, and l’Archange in Saint-Emilion) and once for the wine laboratory he owns and manages, Excell. Pascal Chatonnet is also a consulting enologist at several estates around the world, including Vega Sicilia. Furthemore, he is a leading authority on the interaction between wine and oak. We have translated many of his reasearch papers. His family have very deep roots in Saint-Emilon and once owned premier cru classé La Magdelaine (recently absorbed by Belair). L’Archange has just 1.2 hectares of vines. I like the wine very much and have several bottles of the 2009 in my cellar. The wine is 100% Merlot and aged in new barrels."
This is the label with his name prominently featured
L'Archange.jpeg
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