Some information for all of you interested in spanish wine if any: Ribera del Duero, Rioja, Penades, and whatever other rigions are not considered to be the best. They make modest wine, with a modest price and expectedly modest quality. Exceptions do exist but are rare. By the way, Valbuena is not THE Vega Sicilia wine, it is made in the same bodega, but it's not THAT Vega Sicilia. The real Vega Sicilia (which uses the $2.1 corks) is called "Vega Sicilia Unico", and you can be sure that it's a different story ... and it's the only real exception from Ribera del Duero, probably thanks to it, the region got famous. So what, the '94 year of Valbuena was spoiled by the corks and? - The same wine is out ('96,'97...) and it is with same good old corks and is just great. Life goes on.
I haven't seen a tainted cork in my life. Not a single one. All the bottles I opened had the clean and fresh corks. The only problem I had once, was with a cork (I belive it was a wine from Rioja), I got it out and it fell apart into pieces - cheap wine, cheap cork, bad raw materials, not a big deal. :rolleyes:
Can you describe a tainted cork? Maybe I'm missing something huge here ...
All this movement with corks is invented, it's artificial. You tell a person who is into wine here that wine should be sealed with plastic and he will give you a funny look. There may be occasions, yes, bad luck, bad quality, whatever. Don't raise it to the level of world-wide tragedy. Parker says "good" only on those things he gets payed for, wouldn't trust him THAT much.
OK, I realise that my insisting tone is not very polite and may even be rude. But I live HERE, the third country in the world in wine production and I guess that I have a bit more knowledge on what is good here and what is not, as well as what wines you can expect to be of a high quality and what not. If you have such a high corks failure rate in USA, then the problem is in USA and not all the world.
Another notice on corks. The remark that corks are more expensive for their size and decoration, rather than their quality is a sign of ignorance. Does someone REALLY think that painting a cork is expensive? :rolleyes:
Not all corks are the same, not all trees are the same, not all parts of a tree are the same, not all production methods are the same, not all testing methods are the same, not all transportation and storage methods are the same. I guess that if corks really were THAT bad, serious wineries would have solved the problem already. I see them calm and quiet as ever doing their job.
As for now, I'm going to enjoy all the wine with "bad corks" I can. <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" />
I just can't believe you all think that corks are bad.
