Today's Italian Wine ArticleScrewcaps For Wine - Is It Bye-Bye To The Romance?
Maybe you've noticed screwcaps on more of the higher priced wines lately. The trend is continuing to grow and so is the debate of whether a screwcap or cork is better for wine. The industry has basically "agreed to disagree" as to whether wine bottled with a screwcap or a cork tastes better, ages better and has less of a tendency to spoil.
As more wineries consider using screwcaps instead of the traditional cork, one has to wonder how the public at large will accept the change in tradition. When the occasional wine drinker sees a $20 bottle of wine with a screwcap, will he move to the next bottle on the shelf because he conjuring thoughts in his mind of his college years and Boones Farm Apple Wine?
Corks hold tradition and romance for a bottle of wine. It's hard to imagine dining at a fine eating establishment and ordering a bottle of wine without expecting the waiter pull out his corkscrew. Watching him carefully cut the foil, masterfully twist the screw into the cork, and giving it a pull with a final, ever so slight, pop, is part of what we pay for when we order a bottle of wine. It's shear romance; it's a moment we hold in our memory of a nice dining experience.
Why would a winery want to change an age-old tradition that holds so much charm? Well, apparently the occurrence of wines being spoiled because of the cork is a fairly large problem. One report from the International Wine Challenge, the world's largest wine competition, states that nearly one in 20 bottles, or 4.9% of the 11,033 bottles opened at that competition had spoiled or the flavor had been flattened because of the cork.
How is the cork responsible for the ruin of so much wine? Cork is a tree bark and when wine corks are manufactured, chlorine bleach is used for cleaning and brightening the color. When the bleach comes in contact with the natural molds that are present in the cork, a reaction occurs and a chemical called trichloroanisole (TCA) is produced. If this chemical comes in contact with the wine, it will cause it to taste like damp cardboard. When this happens the wine is then referred to as being "corked", and it is undrinkable.
Screwcaps have proven themselves to be a better alternative to cork. First developed in Australia, the brand name for screwcaps used for wine is Stelvin, so you will often hear them referred to as such. These caps are not the same as those used for food and drink; these caps are specially designed to protect fine wines from tainting for a period of time and to allow for aging. Basically the part of the cap that actually contacts the wine is made from a thin coating of Teflon film over pure tin, this gives the cap the capability to stay stable and flavor-neutral for a very long time.
There are some screwcap critics that say the Stelvin caps don't allow for proper "breathing" so the wine can age, however, this is a myth. If a cork is perfect and works the way it is supposed to work, it will not allow air into the bottle. Actually, oxygen is potentially harmful to the wine and very unnecessary for the aging process. To quote a leading Bordeaux authority Professor Pascal Rib?reau-Gayon in the "Handbook of Enology",
"reactions that take place in bottled wine do not require oxygen".
And one more authority, Professor Emile Peynaud of Bordeaux says,
"it is the opposite of oxidation, a process of reduction, or asphyxia by which wine develops in the bottle"
So, as we watch a trend develop of vintners moving toward using screwcaps we, the wine-drinking public, are just going to have to come to terms with the fact that screwcaps have proven themselves. Because of the Stelvin, we consumers will be able to enjoy better preserved and better tasting wine in the years to come. Actually, instead of thinking about moving to the next bottle on the shelf because of the screwcap, we should be seeking out the wine that delights your palate regardless of whether it uses a screwcap or not.
About the Author
David-The Wine Gift Guy loves to drink wine. Read his experiences, reviews, and recommendations at The Wine Gift Guy. Comments at the site are encouraged, stop by & help David build a great big, snob-free, wine-loving community.
Italian Wine and More
Wine Basics - Find Great Wine Values
Ever felt discontentment and agitated after paying too much for a bottle of wine? Getting a good deal on this kind of product is like getting a good d...
Click Here to Read More About Wine ...
Featured Italian Wine Items
Patent Wine Pourer & Stopper
Is there anything that this multi-talented wine stopper can't do? It ensures gentle and controlled pouring action eliminates stray drips functions as a cork and even aerates wine as it is poured to enhance subtle flavors. The secret is an exclusive design that features an integrated steel ball. The ball seals like a cork when it's at rest yet helps to create a vortex inside the stopper as wine is poured. Rubber/metal/ plastic stopper provides a clean pour every time. Arrives in a handsome wood gift box. 3'L.
Price: 24.95 USD
Current Italian Wine News
Swedish band Pain attacked in Germany - United Press International
Stuff Whiter* People Like QuizWed, 27 Feb 2008 22:31:24 PST
Hoping to prove to myself that I am a badass nonconformist, I read through all 76 entries to date at the Stuff White People Like blog and tallied up my score to see how many applied to me. I was as truthful in my answers as I could tolerate. My white person score: 27 out of 76, which rounds up to 36% white. *More technically, 36% whiter than the average white, since what that blog really describes is the kind of status whoring that upper middle class coastal city liberal whites like to pursu
Swedish band Pain attacked in Germany - United Press International
Chicken Marsala RecipeThu, 15 Nov 2007 19:38:06 PST
This chicken marsala recipe is an Italian dish is made with chicken breasts covered in a Marsala wine and mushroom sauce.
The U.S. Doesn’t Have a Monopoly on Stupid IP Court DecisionsTue, 26 Feb 2008 21:37:07 PST
For those of you who read my blog, you know that I hate software patents. My partner, Jason Mendelson, began fighting me on this back in 2000 when we began working together, but a scant eight years later, he’s joined me in the crusade. In fact, he’ll be arguing this position on March 4th at the Silicon Flatirons event. Lawyers (oops, sorry Jason, ex-lawyers) are so quick to change their thinking. Anyway, from the news of the absurd, Jason pointed out the EU court has determined that the wo
Fancy Dinners with Flack and ForbesSun, 17 Feb 2008 19:15:42 PST
Valentine’s Day…a tribute to love, red and pink, Saint Valentine, and Hallmark. Singleness Awareness Day….a tribute to bitterness, black, Saint Raphael/St. Benedict Joseph Labre/Saint Agatha (depending on who you ask, all are the patron saints of singles) and egging Hallmark. (This is where I point out that I can’t possibly decide whether “St Benedict Joseph Labre Day” or “Singleness Awareness Day” is the more awkward moniker here. I put a vote in for “Anti-Valentines Day” or “Couple Hater
Wine Chillers
Cabernet Sauvignon
Tags:
Napa Valley |
Napa WineLabels: Napa Valley, Napa Wine
&type=page">