Posts Tagged ‘wine temperature’

The Over-Heated Wine Market

European wine prices have jumped approximately 25 percent in 2008. The prices for Champagne and Burgundy have never been higher. Given the astonishing prices of premium wine these days, you would think it would be babied like the first-born you traded to buy it. However, fine wine is often shipped in worse conditions than ice cream or lettuce, sometimes sitting in the blazing sun for hours. The damage done to a wine's taste, smell and color by extreme heat is something that can go unnoticed until opened, despite having paid perhaps $800 to 1600 for it. Eric Vogt, Harvard professor, wine lover and high-tech start-up entrepreneur hopes to remedy the situation. Vogt's eProvenance system includes a tamper-proof seal, a hidden code and an electronic tag for each wine bottle, but it's the temperature tracking element that's getting the most interest. Click here for more information about the damage caused by heat and wine oxidation (maderization).

Tiny Bubbles… In My Wine…

dom_perignon
OK, let's turn Don Ho off (great New Years Eve party tune by the way). Tiny bubbles may make Don happy, but they make oenophiles pretty giddy too. An old adage about Champagne is, the smaller the bubbles, the finer the wine. The tiniest bubbles are the result of long aging, as well as the temperature of the aging cellar. The cooler the wine, the smaller the bubbles. Generally, really tiny bubbles are found in Champagnes known as prestige cuvees. A prestige cuvee is a wine manufacturer's best wine, and it is always given a special name. Dom Perignon, for example, is the prestige cuvee of Moet and Chandon. Click here for further discussion of wine temperature.