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09-21-17, 06:49 AM | #1 | |
SUBSIM Newsman
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How do you like your wine – with a cork or screw-cap?
Quote:
http://www.bbc.com/news/business-41319135 Note: 21 September 2017 I have always preferred wine with cork.
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09-21-17, 07:30 AM | #2 |
Rear Admiral
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Screw top, ice cold
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Guardian of the honey and nuts Let's assume I'm right, it'll save time. |
09-21-17, 08:25 AM | #3 |
Dipped Squirrel Operative
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A lot of modern wines have modern corks made of plastic, working like the original cork ones so the wine can breathe; it is like a bundle of tight-packed filaments.
There are good wines with a screw-cork, too. I would prefer the original cork, however it depends on the wine, not the package. A long time ago we had a discussion with Bruno Prats, back then a wine-grower from the Bordeaux region. He said that a good cork is a pricey thing, not only because of buying the cork-oak plug itself, but because natural corks sometimes malfunction, 'bleeding' unwanted substance in the wine, or letting too much oxygen into the bottle, thus spoiling some of the harvest. Especially bad when it is an expensive wine being spoilt. A lot of wine bottles develop their flavour over ten+ years, so if the cork fails at some point... Prats said he would like to use new sterile artificial ones (those i mentioned above), but apart from being expensive a lot of traditional clients would not buy a Bordeaux wine without a natural cork..
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>^..^<*)))>{ All generalizations are wrong. Last edited by Catfish; 09-21-17 at 08:37 AM. |
09-21-17, 09:04 AM | #4 |
Soaring
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I drank wine or a beer daily, but some years ago I lost the taste for it, also could not deal with the alcohol as good as before, I got a headache already after half a glass of beer or wine.
I then switched to things I did not like before, but combining two dislikes added for one very pleasant like, strnagely. I never liked white beer, or alcohol-free beer - but I exclusively like alcohol-free white beer these days, Erdinger Weißbier. And I happened to be unimpressed by whte wine, and absolutely disliked sweet wine: but now I strongly like an Italian daily-use wine that is not only white but fruity and sweet like freshly picked and squeezed table grapes. Ice-cold, and mixed with one third to one half of ice water, it is most delicious a drink, especially in Summer. And it comes in - ehem, tetrapacks. Pardon the heresy. And twice or three times a year, a small glass of Dalwhinnie. Else, for wine in bottles, corks made of plastic are the way to go, as Catfish said. If you like the style of corks. Personally I could not care any less for whether it has a plastic cork or a screw cap.
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If you feel nuts, consult an expert.
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09-21-17, 09:35 AM | #5 | ||
Gefallen Engel U-666
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Quote:
Quote:
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"Only two things are infinite; The Universe and human squirrelyness; and I'm not too sure about the Universe" Last edited by Aktungbby; 09-21-17 at 10:27 AM. |
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09-21-17, 10:47 AM | #6 |
Starte das Auto
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Not fussed either way, but it's apparently a good tip to shake a bottle of red vigorously after some has been decanted, to get the oxygen into it... no need to let it 'breathe' then, see?
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09-22-17, 01:36 AM | #7 |
Grey Wolf
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09-22-17, 03:33 AM | #8 | |
Navy Seal
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Quote:
"Three Buck Chuck?!?" The last I heard of TJ's wine it was "Two Buck Chuck; it seem inflation has gotten the better of even the most modest of pleasures... I don't drink wine since I have a tendency to develop roaring headaches while I'm drinking it, even in modest amounts, sometime with less than a full glass; my past oenophile acquaintances have told me it my be due to a reaction to the various phosphor compounds found in wine. As time has progressed, I have had to give up drinking hard liquor (done about twenty-odd years ago) due to internal concerns and now find myself even bereft of beer since the young doctors who seem intent on prolonging my life (something they may have to answer for, someday) have placed me on various medications, some of which have very dire warnings about mixing them with anything alcoholic. I don't know what is worse: not being able to down a few pints or having to possibly face the rest of my life without the means to occasionally dull tedium... In this great cork vs. cap debate, where do box wines fit: they tend to have neither, just a spout or spigot?... <O>
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09-22-17, 04:17 AM | #9 |
Silent Hunter
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Figueira da Foz, Portugal
Posts: 4,489
Downloads: 109
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There are wines with out cork?
here almost every wine bottles are with cork. The few exceptions are foreign wines and a few brands/low cost bottles that use plastic/ synthetic rubber cork. |
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