My new case of wine: I'm worried
My new case of wine: I'm worried
Author
Discussion

groucho

Original Poster:

12,134 posts

262 months

Tuesday 17th June 2008
quotequote all
I'm in this wine club and have just received my new case. 3 of the bottles have screw tops, c'mon, that can't be right, can it?

Jasandjules

71,119 posts

245 months

Tuesday 17th June 2008
quotequote all
Such a terribly Middle Class place, PH...biggrinbiggrinbiggrin

Neil_H

15,403 posts

267 months

Tuesday 17th June 2008
quotequote all
I prefer screwtops, much less hassle, no corking and no difference to taste.

Balmoral Green

42,390 posts

264 months

Tuesday 17th June 2008
quotequote all
I like screw tops.

groucho

Original Poster:

12,134 posts

262 months

Tuesday 17th June 2008
quotequote all
Good enough then. biggrin

thehawk

9,335 posts

223 months

Tuesday 17th June 2008
quotequote all
They are supposedly better than corks, keep the wine fresher. (unless it's a particularly fine wine that need aging through oxidisation and then corks are better)

Asterix

24,438 posts

244 months

Tuesday 17th June 2008
quotequote all
Screw tops are fine.

dibbly_dobbler

11,389 posts

213 months

Tuesday 17th June 2008
quotequote all
I was asking a wine buff at work about these the other day and they are becoming increasingly accepted even by these in the know apparently. Screw away with a clear conscience !

anonymous-user

70 months

Tuesday 17th June 2008
quotequote all
With new world wines it seams to be the way ahead! some of the best NZ wines have screw caps and cost more than 35 pounds a bottle! I see it becoming the norm which is no bad thing really!

shadowninja

78,642 posts

298 months

Tuesday 17th June 2008
quotequote all
Screw tops all the way. You spill less as you drive along. Just stay below 30mph and pay your roadtax. thumbup

lazy_b

381 posts

252 months

Tuesday 17th June 2008
quotequote all
Things are probably a bit different for "posh" wines which need to be matured in the bottle, but screw tops are (arguably) better at keeping ordinary wines in good condition than corks.

Having said that, where's the fun in opening a screw-topped bottle of wine? I quite enjoy the ritual of opening a bottle with my trusty old "waiter's friend" (cue double entendres). I reckon the best compromise is a bottle with a synthetic plastic cork - all the fun of opening it, without any risk of cork taint.

Colonial

13,553 posts

221 months

Wednesday 18th June 2008
quotequote all
Ahhh, gotta love a bit of snobbery

Perfectly acceptable.

dickymint

27,265 posts

274 months

Wednesday 18th June 2008
quotequote all
3 litre boxes are the way forward drunk

markomah

652 posts

235 months

Wednesday 18th June 2008
quotequote all
lazy_b said:
Things are probably a bit different for "posh" wines which need to be matured in the bottle, but screw tops are (arguably) better at keeping ordinary wines in good condition than corks.

Having said that, where's the fun in opening a screw-topped bottle of wine? I quite enjoy the ritual of opening a bottle with my trusty old "waiter's friend" (cue double entendres). I reckon the best compromise is a bottle with a synthetic plastic cork - all the fun of opening it, without any risk of cork taint.
yes Agree with all of the foregoing but the synthetic corks strip the silicone coating from Screwpull corkscrews...


smiller

12,171 posts

220 months

Wednesday 18th June 2008
quotequote all
dickymint said:
3 litre boxes are the way forward drunk
The Italians have discovered the conclusion; Tavernello. Drinkable red table wine, 5 Euro for 5 litres bounce


escargot

17,122 posts

233 months

Friday 20th June 2008
quotequote all
lazy_b said:
Having said that, where's the fun in opening a screw-topped bottle of wine? I quite enjoy the ritual of opening a bottle with my trusty old "waiter's friend" (cue double entendres). I reckon the best compromise is a bottle with a synthetic plastic cork - all the fun of opening it, without any risk of cork taint.
I agree. I've always enjoyed the 'event' of de-corking a bottle of wine, irrespective of whether it's expensive or cheap. (Not a fan of those synthetic corks though... seem a bit pointless to me).

miniman

28,230 posts

278 months

Monday 23rd June 2008
quotequote all
We spent a few days at Three Choirs vinyard a couple of years back (O/T - highly recommended) and the vintner there said that it's purely snobbery that means screw caps are frowned upon for wine that's going to be drunk reasonably soon rather than stored for decades. So most supermarket wine ought to have a screw cap by all accounts.

Nevin

2,999 posts

277 months

Sunday 29th June 2008
quotequote all
Tsk, screw caps indeed. If you wish preserve the exclusivity of your wine drinking habit now you can no longer show off by smelling the cork, you can at least refer to them by their technical name of "Stelvin closures". Drop it into conversation to sound erudite and interesting biggrin

Edited by Nevin on Sunday 29th June 12:10

Beyond Rational

3,542 posts

231 months

Sunday 29th June 2008
quotequote all
Just when I was worrying that there wasn't an overly elaborate and pointless product that I could use to open bottles and spark at least 5 minutes of fascinating dinner talk, this life saver came along: http://winefritz.com/intro.htm


Nevin

2,999 posts

277 months

Monday 30th June 2008
quotequote all
Beyond Rational said:
Just when I was worrying that there wasn't an overly elaborate and pointless product that I could use to open bottles and spark at least 5 minutes of fascinating dinner talk, this life saver came along: http://winefritz.com/intro.htm
Dear God. All your burdensome Stelvin closure opening problems solved with one simple, expensive, pointless gadget.