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plastic topped corks
in my pile of junk i got a can full of wine corks that have plastic
mushroom caps. can someone clue me in on these? they must be for short term drinking wine as the exposed cork is only about about an inch. I have about 30+ plus of these, they all look in farily good condition, not sure how'd you use a corker on them. I'm temped to find a way to pull the plastic off and use the corks straight. very nice looking wood on them |
plastic topped corks
They are frequently called tasters or tasting corks. In tasting rooms, when
they open a bottle for someone to taste the wine, they do not want to leave the bottle sitting out open such that it quickly oxidizes and they do not want to put the same cork back in the bottle as it is hard to put in and take out. The tasters corks serve the purpose. Easy to insert and remove by hand. I use them when it do not finish all of a bottle. I will often pore the remaining wine into a half bottle (a split) and use a tasters cork and put in in the refrigerator for a day or two. Ray "Tater" > wrote in message ups.com... > in my pile of junk i got a can full of wine corks that have plastic > mushroom caps. can someone clue me in on these? they must be for short > term drinking wine as the exposed cork is only about about an inch. > > I have about 30+ plus of these, they all look in farily good > condition, not sure how'd you use a corker on them. > > I'm temped to find a way to pull the plastic off and use the corks > straight. very nice looking wood on them > |
plastic topped corks
> They are frequently called tasters or tasting corks.
Another name for them is T Tops (short for tasters). Don't take them apart, you can keep wine under them for at least 6 months if they seal tight. I use them for vinegar I give away along with what Ray uses them for too. They make a synthetic one that is really nice too. Joe |
plastic topped corks
On Mar 19, 4:48 pm, "Joe Sallustio" > wrote:
> > They are frequently called tasters or tasting corks. > > Another name for them is T Tops (short for tasters). > > Don't take them apart, you can keep wine under them for at least 6 > months if they seal tight. I use them for vinegar I give away along > with what Ray uses them for too. tried with one and noticed that it was much shorter than the other corks that i have(which i will toss after i play with them enough) I am considering just bulk storing the wine in extra carboys then only using a hand corker and bottles for the few that i might give away. of course this brings up other issues that i'll post in another topic |
plastic topped corks
If Ray and I understand you correctly thay are supposed to be shorter
and narrower than a regular cork becuase they are made to be pushed in by hand. They have a little chamfer on them to allow you to start them easily. Joe |
plastic topped corks
C.J.J.Berry, one of the old time WineMaker Authors, suggested that you keep
your wine in bulk storage carboys, maybe 1 gallon size, and just bottle a short term supply as you need them. I bottle in bulk but thought you might be interested in that comment. Ray "Tater" > wrote in message oups.com... > On Mar 19, 4:48 pm, "Joe Sallustio" > wrote: >> > They are frequently called tasters or tasting corks. >> >> Another name for them is T Tops (short for tasters). >> >> Don't take them apart, you can keep wine under them for at least 6 >> months if they seal tight. I use them for vinegar I give away along >> with what Ray uses them for too. > > tried with one and noticed that it was much shorter than the other > corks that i have(which i will toss after i play with them enough) > > I am considering just bulk storing the wine in extra carboys then only > using a hand corker and bottles for the few that i might give away. > > of course this brings up other issues that i'll post in another topic > |
plastic topped corks
"Tater" > wrote in message oups.com... > On Mar 19, 4:48 pm, "Joe Sallustio" > wrote: > > > They are frequently called tasters or tasting corks. > > > > Another name for them is T Tops (short for tasters). > > > > Don't take them apart, you can keep wine under them for at least 6 > > months if they seal tight. I use them for vinegar I give away along > > with what Ray uses them for too. > > tried with one and noticed that it was much shorter than the other > corks that i have(which i will toss after i play with them enough) > > I am considering just bulk storing the wine in extra carboys then only > using a hand corker and bottles for the few that i might give away. > > of course this brings up other issues that i'll post in another topic > ....but not before you sanitise the corks, your hands and anything else that will come into contact with the wine.... ;-) Mike |
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