From my limited experience most see the cork as a quality issue ( better)
And therein lies the fallacy between perception vs reality.
And therein lies the fallacy between perception vs reality.
Hmm - I think Marki might be talking about the quality of the wine, not the enclosure. I'd say that it's certainly true of non-Aussie/NZ wine that a lot of the better wine is under cork, and it tends to be the lower quality stuff under screwcap.
I'm firmly in the Stelvin camp. Whatever else, to not get that horrid musty aroma that heralds the death of fruit-based flavour is a luxury.
To muddy the waters, what's with the Pet Nat predilection for crown seals????? Given the - dare I say - unpredictability of how much fermentation has continued in the bottle, having a jagged-edged piece of metal sitting atop who knows how much CO2 dying to get out? I've tried 2 lately, 1 gushed over a glassful of wine into the sink (a judiciouis last moment aha!) & another had aspirations to become a small satellite, thwarted by my ceiling & not an eyeball by good fortune only. :-|
Is it some hipster kinda thing - look at us dudes, we're doing the 'just let it all happen naturally thing' & being low tech, hell we'll cap it like the old man's home-brew ale. Groovy! :idea:
Or is it a cost thing? Certainly the wines I've tried have no aspirations to sit in a cellar for long, so it's kind of outside the cork v Stelvin. But I think we must nip this one in the bud. They're not convenient, they're not a statement - they are dangerous. :evil:
Yes the second fermentation lasting 18 mths or so is done under crown cap then disgorged and bottle sealed with a cork. I was very pleased to see the SSSS anniversary vintage release under crown. Cellaring nicely in me frudge as we speak they are.There should be zero fermentation going on after disgorgement. If there is, you have a serious wine making fault. I'm all for crown seals. Much better than cork. Never had an issue. Glad to see Seppelt Show Shiraz sparkling uses them.
" plastic corks" for "plastic people"
So plastic of the stelvin brand is for a 'stelvin person'?
edit: The link was not to a Stelvin closure so I removed it
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Or is it a cost thing? Certainly the wines I've tried have no aspirations to sit in a cellar for long, so it's kind of outside the cork v Stelvin. But I think we must nip this one in the bud. They're not convenient, they're not a statement - they are dangerous. :evil:
The only thing I miss with corks is the ability to send a wine back saying it is corked.
Not sure how you would go claiming this wine is screwed.