jjbrr, on Jan 11 2010, 09:26 PM, said:
Winstonm, on Jan 11 2010, 06:36 PM, said:
And generally speaking, the really high quality wines will still be bottled with real cork, although that is not as pervasive of truth as it once was due to dwindling supplies of cork trees.
I was assigned the task of picking out the wine to go with a steak dinner at a fancy-ish steakhouse in downtown Dallas over Thanksgiving weekend. I picked a Shiraz to go with the steak, potatoes, and sauteed mushrooms we ordered. I was very surprised to see a $70 bottle of Shiraz with a screw top lol. Even so, it was a perfect accompaniment to the food, and everyone was satisfied, so I guess I can't complain. I assume this isn't that surprising to people with more wine experience, but it was new to me.
I was talking with my cousin over Thanksgiving. He worked at a vinyard in Oregon about 2 years ago and learned a lot there. From what he tells me, screwtops used to have a stigma placed on them because simply because cork was the old-fashioned way and people would be damned rather than look like a bunch of hillbillies unscrewing some homemade wine.
But actually screwtops are, I guess, really coming on lately. Benefits:
1) Don't generate the 'plastic flavor' some people complain of with artificial corks
2) Don't get corked! (In the bad way)
3) Really easy to take off!
It's safe and reliable and does everything a real cork does and doesn't do the things that are terrible that cork does... so wineries that say 'screw it (pun!) we just want to make good wine' are starting to use them more.
That being said, I still like to uncork my wine
They also say that you need real cork to age wine correctly, since a small amount of oxygen penetration is required, which you can't get with the other stopping methods. But for young wines, I think scientists would agree that screwtops are the best option.