Thread: residue at cork
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Bi!! Bi!! is offline
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Default residue at cork

On Apr 28, 6:44Â*pm, wrote:
> > > > > I tried a California merlot & discovered a thick, dark residue on the
> > > > > inside of the bottle after it was corked. Ick! What is it? I
> > > > > presume this is something to do with improper storage.

>
> > > > > Thanks in advance, my fellow wine lovers!! �

>
> > > > Many red wines will drop a sediment after bottling. �It's a totally
> > > > natural thing and in no way harms the wine. �The stuff on the inside of
> > > > the cork is often that same sediment combined with crystals of tartaric
> > > > acid, another natural component of wine. �The only thing I'd suggest is
> > > > that you don't agitate the bottle too much when pouring from a bottle
> > > > with sediment in it, as the sediment itself will impart a bitter taste
> > > > to the wine. If it's been agitated, you can pour the wine through a
> > > > coffee filter to remove the sediment.

>
> > > Coffee filter; great idea. �The sediment was very heavy, even coating
> > > the inside of the bottle once it was empty, and it was apparent in the
> > > glass. Bleagh.

>
> > What exactly was the wine?

>
> A rather crude Merlot from Sonoma.- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -


I mean the name. If the wine was bad, crude and you rated it at a 70
I'd like to know what it is so I don't buy it too.