Uploaded by bkwine on Dec 12, 2009
http://www.BKWineTours.com *Come on a wine & food tour with us!* --- Cork in the bottle? Interview with Carlos de Jesus, marketing and communications director from Amorim, the worlds largest producer of natural cork.
There has been a lot of criticism of cork in recent years, and people arguing that other type of stoppers are better: screw caps, plastic corks etc. Is cork a bad material to close bottles with? Is it better always to use screw caps? Is the cork the ultimate culprit for cork taint, corked wine, wine that tastes bad when opened? But perhaps "the rumour of my death has been highly exaggerated".
Carlos argues that natural cork (from cork oak trees) is still the best bottle stopper:
Cork is the most used bottle stopper, or closure of any, used in the majority of the 16 or 17 billion bottles produced every year. In recent years Amorim has invested 53 million euros to improve the quality of the corks. They have invested in research, process improvements, training, sophisticated chemical analysis equipment, quality control etc etc, and have today very sophisticated tracking and quality control tools which minimise any problems that there may be with cork.
Carlos explains that 2,4,6-trichloroanisole (TCA that is often said to be the reason for cork taint or 'corked' wine bottles) and other anisoles can come from many different sources, not only the cork. A cork stopper has 800 million cells. It comes from a tree that is at least 50 years old (before the first quality harvest). Each tree is then harvested every nine years. We also talk about the oxygen or air transmission between the outside and the wine, through the cork (oxygen ingress) and the oxidising impact that can have on wine.
We also get some views from a cork forest where we see the oak bark (and some cows), as well as newly harvested trees, and a quick visit to a cork factory storage yard. There are huge piles of cork bark drying and waiting to be processed.
More information can be found on Amorims sites:
http://www.corkfacts.com
http://www.amorim.com
This interview was made during a visit to Amorim in connection with the European Wine Bloggers Conference #EWBC 2009 in Lisbon: http://winebloggersconference.org/europe/
Music: El Perez, rumba francesa, http://www.jamendo.com
By BKWine, http://www.bkwine.com
See all our wine videos on our BKWine TV channel: http://www.youtube.com/bkwine
Category:
Tags:
License:
Standard YouTube License
-
1 likes, 0 dislikes
7:19[E] Cortes de Cima, Alentejo, Hans Kristian Jor...by bkwine225 views
9:16[E] Steenberg Vineyards, South Africa, John Lou...by bkwine90 views
7:03[E] Cortes de Cima, Alentejo, Portugal, Winemak...by bkwine141 views
7:24Wines and food of Istria in Croatia w Guido Sch...by bkwine652 views
6:45TopSeries Amorim Luxepack Monacoby mesquitamorim753 views
8:13How cork is madeby drjamiegoode10,845 views
0:36Rob Kies in Amorim 2008, Portugalby FlyingWineWriter932 views
3:48quim barreirosby anfalz13,126,386 views
0:34Grupo Amorim, cork harvest 2008 in Portugal.by FlyingWineWriter4,729 views
5:29Feira Internacional da Cortiça em Corucheby ORibatejo2,600 views
8:56Cork and capsules full manufactoring processby petovio1148 views
2:36Cork Harvestingby CorkieTV25,103 views
6:50Catavino Visit to Amorimby obiscoito879 views
4:29Cork in Portugalby WWF22,465 views
3:42Amorim Cork MCC Challenge 2011by winemagazinesa31 views
0:28Cork Harvestby JelinekCork2,652 views
5:05Save Miguel in Italianoby eccomikaa393 views
2:45Cork flooring. Self locking panels- install you...by simplefloors15,564 views
1:07Grupo Amorimby aicepPortugalGlobal679 views
4:40Vamos salvar os sobreiros 2009 cork oak Querc...by armindobento1947548 views
- Loading more suggestions...
Link to this comment:
All Comments (0)