How the cork got screwed

Screw caps vs corks on wine bottles
By No machine-readable author provided. Symposiarch assumed (based on copyright claims). [GFDL, CC-BY-SA-3.0 or CC BY-SA 2.5-2.0-1.0], via Wikimedia Commons

By Joseph Temple

What a difference a decade makes.

It was only ten years ago when cork ruled supreme, controlling approximately 95% of the wine closure market. That’s because the alternative – sealing bottles with aluminum screw caps – was thought by many to be bargain basement and thus relegated to mostly low values wines.

Fast-forward to today and a 180-degree shift has taken place in consumer attitudes with screw caps now accounting for 20% of all wine closures. Natural cork however is facing a war on numerous fronts with stiff competition from not only screw caps but from synthetic corks and boxed wine, reducing its market share to 70%. “We got the proverbial kick in the pants,” said a representative for one of Portugal’s biggest cork producers. And some feel that its decline is only going to get worse.

Predicting what 2015 has in store for the world of wine, the influential Robert M. Parker Jr. believes cork will be in the minority. “More and more state-of-the-art wineries are moving to screw caps for wines that need to be consumed within 3 to 4 years of the vintage (about 95 percent of the world’s wines). Look for this trend to accelerate,” writes Parker.

A key factor that hurts cork tremendously is the lack of concern towards closures from those who aren’t interested in collecting or storing wine for long periods of time. According to a study by the Federal University of Pampa’s (Brazil) Oenology Department, “85.71 percent reported they were indifferent to the type of seal at the time of purchase.

For the majority of wines, the advantages that screw caps offer are numerous. They’re easier to open, more cost-effective and you don’t have to worry about the potential of little cork pieces floating around in your glass. But perhaps the greatest breakthrough for this type of closure has been a decade-long demystification process, which has dismantled the notion that screw caps are only used for cheap and bad tasting wines. Countries like Australia and New Zealand have successfully made the switch over with many prominent American and European wineries following suit, preferring screw caps for their high-end bottles of pinot grigio and sauvignon blanc.

Despite its flaws, one of cork’s greatest strengths is rooted in tradition. For hundreds of years, the ritual of uncorking a bottle is deeply embedded in western culture. And for fuller and more complex wines, the ability to allow a bottle to breathe is a must for collectors of high-end wines. But as the technology of its competition evolves, cork producers must combat the issue of trichloroanisole, also known as cork taint, which affects around 5% of all bottles that use this closure method. Failures to address this problem in the next decade will only fast-track cork’s demise.

“At the end of the day,” one manufacturer said, “the cork industry is the horse versus the car.”


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Ask Sid: Pairing wine with Kobe Beef

kobe beef and wine

Question: I am serving actual Kobe beef for my 70th birthday so what wines would you suggest as a match?

Answer: Lucky you – what a special treat! I have been fortunate to enjoy it on several occasions both in Japan and here in North America. The best examples were at Wolfgang Puck’s CUT restaurant in the Four Seasons Hotel in Beverly Hills Los Angeles California. Wolfgang prepared identical size cuts of sirloin, rib eye and filet from American Wagyu beef from Snake River Farms in Idaho against true 100% Kobe beef from Kyushu Japan and cooked them identically. The differences were startling with the Wagyu the best steak you can imagine chewing while the fat content was so much more accentuated in the Kobe that you thought you were having foie gras melt in your mouth. Accordingly most big bold full bodied red wines even with younger tannins will work marvellously. Ideal would be to celebrate both your birthday and the amazing 1945 Chateau Latour next year at 70 years but let’s get real. I usually go for a cabernet sauvignon with lamb and pinot noir with beef but here almost any top red wine will work well. I might choose a ripe Napa California cab sauv, a 1990 or 2000 Bordeaux, any vintage of Barolo/Barbaresco as they will seem less tannic, syrah not too spicy say from Northern Rhone Hermitage, Cornas, St Joseph or even Cote Rotie. Almost any bottle of fine red wine from around the world will taste outstanding paired with Kobe beef as the high fat content will smooth it out and increase your overall enjoyment.


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Christmas food traditions around the world

Holiday food from around the globe

Food traditions celebrating Christmas, Hanukkah, and all the year end festivities around the world are uniquely varied. The IWFS Vancouver Branch for many years at their annual December event specifically focused the meal on only special foods served during this time in different countries including Germany, Netherlands, Italy, England, Denmark, France, Norway and more. Makes for a wonderful educational event. You don’t have to go that far but it is fun and worldly to incorporate one foreign country food item into your menu. Maybe something from your own heritage background. Google it to get ideas and recipes but some of my best ones include:

GREECE: Avgolemo Soup with chicken, lemon & egg; Baklava

HUNGARY: Roast Goose or Duck; Beigli poppy seed cake

NETHERLANDS: Spicy Speculaas Cookies with ginger & cinnamon

MEXICO: Spicy tamales

AUSTRIA: Sachertorte, Linzertorte

NEW ZEALAND: Pavlova

FRANCE: Oysters, Foie Gras, Smoked Salmon, Scallops – Coquilles St. Jacques

GERMANY:  Stollen and the most intricate Christmas cookies, Gluhwein,

ITALY: Panforte honey fruitcake, Panettone

ARGENTINA: Empanadas, Asado meats

CHILE: Pan de Pascua sponge cake with cloves & candied fruits

CANADA: Spiced nuts, gingerbread house, shortbreads, cranberry sauce, tourtiere meat pies, Nanaimo bars

CZECH: Fish or pea soup, Potato salad

PUERTO RICO: Pasteles savoury cakes in banana leaves

AUSTRALIA: Usually the hot summer holidays so now cold Christmas dishes work nearly as well as the Barbie

DENMARK: Roast pork & crackling, Glogg mulled red wine with spices

PORTUGAL: Bacalhau cod

SPAIN: Jamon dry cured ham

SWEDEN: Gravad Lax salmon dill, Meatballs

UK: Roast turkey, stuffing, Brussels sprouts, pudding, mince pies

USA: Roast ham after recent November Thanksgiving turkey & regional specialities

My lovely wife Joan has a Norwegian background so we usually include one item from there in our celebrations. For some years it was their traditional Lutefisk of fish preserved in lye. We thankfully gave that one up but now every year we love making their delicious Lefse – a Norwegian potato flat bread and Kransekake – almond ring cake.  Find your own outstanding treat and let us all know what it is. Merry Christmas.


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A brief glossary of wine terms (Infographic)

By Joseph Temple

With the holiday season now in full throttle, there will be no shortage of parties as we count down to the end of 2014.  Of course, what would a festive celebration be without some wine – either red, white or sparkling?  And as the bottles are uncorked, there are a lot of terms in the wine world that will make describing your favourite glass a little bit easier.  Whether its tannin, aroma or bouquet, a quick study with this helpful infographic that defines ten commonly used wine terms will certainly polish anyone’s cocktail party conversation.

Cheers!

wine glossary
Click to expand | Download a high-res version (4.6 Megs)


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Ask Sid: Christmas/Holiday Cards

Ask Sid: Christmas/Holiday Cards
Photo Credit: vinepair.com/holiday-cards

Question: I finally decided this year to stop sending out seasonal Christmas cards by post mail. What about email?

Answer: There are lots of eCards out there but they don’t really deliver the same personal message. Google it to see some of the different options. Check out punchbowl.com, bluemountain.com, 123greetings.com, jacquielawson.com and many others. There is merit in keeping in touch producing an original note based on a food or wine theme and a family photo. Smilebox.com is worth exploring for this. Think up something original – maybe your favourite holiday recipe. Do your own IWFS video. Post on You Tube? Maybe not! I sometimes send a fun one that is wine or booze orientated like those for example on www.vinepair.com/holiday-cards.


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