A surprising experiment..
- uncle tom
- Dalva Golden White Colheita 1952
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A surprising experiment..
A detail that has nagged me for a while is the possibility that vintage port evolution might not just be a matter of time in the decanter, but might also be associated with the formation of a spiritous surface layer, which, when drawn off, leaves the good wine below.
So a simple experiment.
My victim was a Graham '77; a wine that has some history for needing a long decant. After decanting, I left the decanter stoppered and untouched for 27 hours before drawing a glass.
At the time of decanting, I supped the dregs from the bottle, and found them to be rich, aromatic, and free of taint.
So I was surprised to find the first glass from the decanter (poured carefully to avoid unduly disturbing the contents) to be clearly corked.
I was also annoyed, as I have had more than my fair share of tainted bottles this year.
A second glass was also clearly tainted - Ok to drink, but with a soggy cardboard nose.
Later I drew a nightcap, and found the taint was barely noticeable. Now, at D + 46 I have poured another glass and found it completely free of taint.
For the purpose of the initial experiment, I found the wine to be fully integrated at D + 27, with no excess spirit; so tentatively conclude that it is indeed time alone that causes a decanted bottle to evolve.
BUT.. given a little time, does TCA taint migrate to the surface, whence it may be drawn off?
Could I ask anyone encountering a corked bottle to put the decanter to one side for a day or so, then carefully draw off a glass or two without stirring up the contents of the decanter - and see whether the remaining wine is then freed from taint?
Tom
So a simple experiment.
My victim was a Graham '77; a wine that has some history for needing a long decant. After decanting, I left the decanter stoppered and untouched for 27 hours before drawing a glass.
At the time of decanting, I supped the dregs from the bottle, and found them to be rich, aromatic, and free of taint.
So I was surprised to find the first glass from the decanter (poured carefully to avoid unduly disturbing the contents) to be clearly corked.
I was also annoyed, as I have had more than my fair share of tainted bottles this year.
A second glass was also clearly tainted - Ok to drink, but with a soggy cardboard nose.
Later I drew a nightcap, and found the taint was barely noticeable. Now, at D + 46 I have poured another glass and found it completely free of taint.
For the purpose of the initial experiment, I found the wine to be fully integrated at D + 27, with no excess spirit; so tentatively conclude that it is indeed time alone that causes a decanted bottle to evolve.
BUT.. given a little time, does TCA taint migrate to the surface, whence it may be drawn off?
Could I ask anyone encountering a corked bottle to put the decanter to one side for a day or so, then carefully draw off a glass or two without stirring up the contents of the decanter - and see whether the remaining wine is then freed from taint?
Tom
I may be drunk, Miss, but in the morning I shall be sober and you will still be ugly - W.S. Churchill
Re: A surprising experiment..
Why not use a pipette to draw one glass of wine from near the surface, and one from near the base of the decanter?
- uncle tom
- Dalva Golden White Colheita 1952
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Re: A surprising experiment..
Whilst I have some pipettes, and will attempt just that when the next opportunity presents, I doubt that many are thus equipped.Why not use a pipette to draw one glass of wine from near the surface, and one from near the base of the decanter?
Tom
I may be drunk, Miss, but in the morning I shall be sober and you will still be ugly - W.S. Churchill
- oscar quevedo
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Re: A surprising experiment..
I'll try it when I find my next corked bottle. I'm curious to know the result....
Oscar Quevedo, http://quevedoportwine.com/
Re: A surprising experiment..
uncle tom wrote:Whilst I have some pipettes, and will attempt just that when the next opportunity presents, I doubt that many are thus equipped.Why not use a pipette to draw one glass of wine from near the surface, and one from near the base of the decanter?
Tom
i happen to have two long draw pipettes,
port only or will dry reds worrk in the experiment?
actualyl what's interesting is that TCA (density ~1) is more dense then ethanol (density .789), so the bottom draw should actually contain more tca then the top.
looking at the anisole family .
http://msds.chem.ox.ac.uk/AN/anisole.html
it looks to be tca is neglible solubility in water, so that tca actually doesn't integrate with the liquid component but being of the same density (just slightly less then water) if you wait long enuf, it might actaully be the "middle" layer that contains the tca.
It sounds very plausible that you could be correct tom.
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Re: A surprising experiment..
actually as i think about it
if you could do it in a beaker ..
if you know the alcohol by volume content, say 18%
then you could theoritcally draw off the top 18% of the beaker which should leave a bottle of tca,
and everything in between should be the good stuff.
if you could do it in a beaker ..
if you know the alcohol by volume content, say 18%
then you could theoritcally draw off the top 18% of the beaker which should leave a bottle of tca,
and everything in between should be the good stuff.
Last edited by g-man on 15:13 Sat 22 Aug 2009, edited 1 time in total.
Disclosure: Distributor of Quevedo wines and Quinta do Gomariz
Re: A surprising experiment..
Alcohol and water are extremely miscible. Indeed, they are so miscible that a litre of pure water plus a liter of pure alcohol makes considerably less than two litres of liquid. So if the TCA separates, it is either at the top or at the bottom, as there is definitely not an internal water-alcohol boundary at which it might be concentrated. Top or bottom, not 18% of the way anywhere.
Re: A surprising experiment..
yea, i just had to think more clearly,
alcohol and water are strong attracting molecules.
i found the msds for TCA as oppose to anisole (main component without the tri chloro)
http://www.lookchem.com/cas-503/50375-10-5.html
this is 2,3,6 TCA as oppose the more stable 2,4,6 tca. but density would be the same for the two components.
density is actually 1.416 g/cm3 which would make it heavier then water
alcohol and water are strong attracting molecules.
i found the msds for TCA as oppose to anisole (main component without the tri chloro)
http://www.lookchem.com/cas-503/50375-10-5.html
this is 2,3,6 TCA as oppose the more stable 2,4,6 tca. but density would be the same for the two components.
density is actually 1.416 g/cm3 which would make it heavier then water
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- mosesbotbol
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Re: A surprising experiment..
I think you'll taste TCA no matter how you siphon the bottle, decanter, or beaker. A little TCA goes a long way if you are sensitive to it.
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- JacobH
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Re: A surprising experiment..
I’d be interested in hearing whether there is a notable difference between the top and bottom of a well-decanted decanter of Port. Perhaps the pipette should be inserted at decanting time to avoid contamination?uncle tom wrote:Whilst I have some pipettes, and will attempt just that when the next opportunity presents, I doubt that many are thus equipped.
If this experiment is sucessful, it might cause a revival of those miniature barrel-shaped decanters!
Without aiming to divert this post, is there any truth in Wikipedia’s cure?mosesbotbol wrote:I think you'll taste TCA no matter how you siphon the bottle, decanter, or beaker. A little TCA goes a long way if you are sensitive to it.
Wikipedia wrote: One method of removing TCA from tainted wine is to soak polyethylene (a plastic used for applications such as milk containers and plastic food wrap) in the infected wine. The non-polar TCA molecule has a high affinity for the polyethylene molecule, thereby removing the taint from the wine. The surface area of polyethylene needed to reduce the taint to sub-threshold levels is based on the TCA level in the affected wine, temperature, and the alcohol level of the wine.
This can be done at home, as advocated by Andrew Waterhouse, professor of wine chemistry at University of California, Davis, by pouring the wine into a bowl with a sheet of plastic wrap. For ease of pouring, a pitcher, measuring cup, or decanter can be used instead. Effective within a few minutes, the 2,4,6-trichloroanisole molecule is chemically similar to polyethylene and will stick to the plastic.
Re: A surprising experiment..
I have heard that yes, the "cure" does in fact remove a significant amount of the TCA taint, but it has a tendency to replace it with a polyethylene taint.JacobH wrote:Without aiming to divert this post, is there any truth in Wikipedia’s cure?
Glenn Elliott
Re: A surprising experiment..
heh anyboyd have a centrifuge at home?
would also make for an interesting sediment filtration method.
would also make for an interesting sediment filtration method.
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- JacobH
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Re: A surprising experiment..
Ah yes, I can see that happening...Glenn E. wrote:I have heard that yes, the "cure" does in fact remove a significant amount of the TCA taint, but it has a tendency to replace it with a polyethylene taint.JacobH wrote:Without aiming to divert this post, is there any truth in Wikipedia’s cure?
And possibly a way of increasing effective decanting time?g-man wrote:heh anyboyd have a centrifuge at home?
would also make for an interesting sediment filtration method.
- uncle tom
- Dalva Golden White Colheita 1952
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Re: A surprising experiment..
I've not looked at it before, but the chemistry behind the polyethylene cure seems reasonably sound; and pure polyethylene should be odourless and tasteless.but it has a tendency to replace it with a polyethylene taint
Cling film is not always made of polyethylene, and is a bit fiddly - especially if pouring from a bottle.
I'm wondering where one might obtain a modest quantity of polyethylene granules (as used for injection moulding)..?
Tom
I may be drunk, Miss, but in the morning I shall be sober and you will still be ugly - W.S. Churchill
Re: A surprising experiment..
but you wouldn't have to worry about murky port again!! =)JacobH wrote:And possibly a way of increasing effective decanting time?g-man wrote:heh anyboyd have a centrifuge at home?
would also make for an interesting sediment filtration method.
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- JacobH
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Re: A surprising experiment..
I'm fairly firmly in the "suck it through your teeth" school of thought, so it's not something that has particularly bothered me up to nowg-man wrote:but you wouldn't have to worry about murky port again!! =)JacobH wrote:And possibly a way of increasing effective decanting time?g-man wrote:heh anyboyd have a centrifuge at home?
would also make for an interesting sediment filtration method.
- mosesbotbol
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Re: A surprising experiment..
Soon it will be port extract that is mixed with distilled water...
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Re: A surprising experiment..
heh at least then you can carry it on the plane without having to check it into baggage!
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- Alex Bridgeman
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Re: A surprising experiment..
Yes, it works. I've tried this with the US food wrap Saran Wrap, which is a pure polyethylene wrap. It certainly removed the TCA taint and improved the port, but still didn't leave it as it should have been.JacobH wrote:Wikipedia wrote: One method of removing TCA from tainted wine is to soak polyethylene (a plastic used for applications such as milk containers and plastic food wrap) in the infected wine. The non-polar TCA molecule has a high affinity for the polyethylene molecule, thereby removing the taint from the wine. The surface area of polyethylene needed to reduce the taint to sub-threshold levels is based on the TCA level in the affected wine, temperature, and the alcohol level of the wine.
This can be done at home, as advocated by Andrew Waterhouse, professor of wine chemistry at University of California, Davis, by pouring the wine into a bowl with a sheet of plastic wrap. For ease of pouring, a pitcher, measuring cup, or decanter can be used instead. Effective within a few minutes, the 2,4,6-trichloroanisole molecule is chemically similar to polyethylene and will stick to the plastic.
Incidentally, it was Gould Campbell 1977 I was forced to do this with.
Top Ports in 2024: Niepoort 1900 Colheita, b.1971. A near perfect Port.
2025: Quevedo 1972 Colheita, b.2024. Just as good as Niepoort 1900!
2025: Quevedo 1972 Colheita, b.2024. Just as good as Niepoort 1900!
- uncle tom
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Re: A surprising experiment..
I had a quick look at the cling film in Tesco today - one brand says its PVC, another gave no clues..
Tom
Tom
I may be drunk, Miss, but in the morning I shall be sober and you will still be ugly - W.S. Churchill
- SushiNorth
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Re: A surprising experiment..
I see a blind taste test coming. next time we have a bottle truly id'd as corked, we prepare regular and glad-wrapped versions of the wine, then pour one glass of one and two glasses of the other. Hand to someone who can spot TCA and get a verdict.
- JacobH
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Re: A surprising experiment..
It would probably be worth passing some non-tainted Port through the wrap, too, to see what effect that would have on it.SushiNorth wrote:I see a blind taste test coming. next time we have a bottle truly id'd as corked, we prepare regular and glad-wrapped versions of the wine, then pour one glass of one and two glasses of the other. Hand to someone who can spot TCA and get a verdict.
- mosesbotbol
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Re: A surprising experiment..
Good idea.JacobH wrote:It would probably be worth passing some non-tainted Port through the wrap, too, to see what effect that would have on it.
I am skeptical of the whole thing.
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