Corks - Now I am worried.

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Kev

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As a newbie, we just had our first bottling weekend.

A chocolate Orange port, an Amarone, and a Chilean Malbec Shiraz.

They only got bulk aged just over a month more than the instructions state.

The good news, all three tasted very good, even at this early stage. The Malbec perhaps a little too strong on the oak, but I expect that will settle with time.

There was a half bottle of each left which I corked until the next day.

As the two big reds were intended for aging, at the recommendation of the wine store, I used synthetic corks.

Both corks I removed have a score line down one side of the cork, likely from the jaws in my new floor corker.
It looks just like you took your thumb nail and made a line down the length of the cork.

I am worried this could cause an air leak. The bottles are still vertical.


The standard cork in the port is fine.

Do I need to remove the seals and all the corks and replace them? 60 bottles.
 
Im guessing you have a Port. floor corker! This is a well known problem and yes you may want to remove and recork using non synthetic with a Port corker.
 
Yes it is a plastic jaw Port. Corker. The new purple color version, which I was told by the wine store was an upgrade to the older orange version. Further I was told it was the orange version that had the scoring problem. However I seem to have confirmed otherwise.

I guess I have to give up on synthetic corks, as I am unable to find a reasonable corker that works with them.

Kev
 
Is there a better corker I can get?

If not what is a proper cork for 5 years storage?
 
A little research suggests I need to get the Italian corker instead of Portuguese, if I want to use good ( synthetic ) corks.

I don't mind spending the extra $70, I just want it to work with these corks.

Kev
 
I will typically use synthetics corks and push them down atleast 1/4'' and add wax to insure a proper seal

thanks steve
 
Kev, youd be better off buying Bi-disc corks, there way better then synthetic corks are and they will work with your corker and let your wine age much better.
 
Kev, youd be better off buying Bi-disc corks, there way better then synthetic corks are and they will work with your corker and let your wine age much better.

Are those the ones with aglomerated cork in the middle but end caps of solid cork?

I have seen those on-line, but not at the wine stores.
 
Yes, Dan and a few people buy them in quantity from a place at a veru reasonable place but not sure if they sell in less then 1000 but if not check out our sponsors, I know The Wine Makers Toy Store sells them at good prices and Im sure our other sponsor Brew & Winw Supply can get them also. They are designed for long term storage. Of you font plan on aging past say 2 years the Perfect Agglomerate are just fine and I have many wines aged about 5 years in tjem and they are better then ever still so that aging statement is just a precaution!
 
I could by 1000, but that is a three year supply for me. Do they keep that long ?

The wax sounds like an interesting fix for the ones already done.

Is that a simple process?
 
Kev - I have been using synthetic corks ( nomacorc) with my portuguese corker for about 8 years now with no problems. I occasionally see a crease but it has not affected the cork performance so I would suggest you don't write off synthetics without giving them a chance. Put your bottles on their side, if not already, and see if the wine migrates into this crease; I think you will find it doesn't, but if it does then at least you will know for sure that you have a problem. Also keep in mind that not all synthetics are created equal - some are not as pliable and therefore harder for the iris to compress and this could create a creasing problem.
 
Just an update. Many of the synthetic corks did leak, so I am back to cork. Just very slow leaks, so only several ounces lost. Wine was still good.

More research has confirmed any iris type corkers should not be used with synthetic corks. Other than a hard to use for higher volumes, double lever corker, I cannot find a non iris corker, in my price range.

Still looking for a Canadian source ( to save shipping and brokerage costs) of the twin disk type of cork.
 
Here's the best corks and the link to buy them, there's nothing that compares. I would never buy cheap corks again after losing the batch of wine I made a few months back.
Link: http://www.widgetco.com/wine-corks-flor-quality-24-45

Flor Quality Natural Wine Corks

Suggested for wines: 12+ years old
Material: Highest Grade Natural Cork (1st of 9)
Diameter: #9 (24mm)
Length: 1-3/4" (44mm)
Fits: Standard Wine Bottles (750ml)

Natural "Flor" Wine Corks are natural wine corks intended for wine storage of 12+ years. Natural wine corks are punched from cork oak bark harvested once every 9 years, then dried for up to 2 more years. The wine corks are punched from the cork oak bark and then sorted by quality; the fewer the lenticels (crevise like imperfections) the better the wine cork. "Flor" is considered the highest quality-grade natural wine cork.

Made from 100% natural cork harvested in Portugal. All corks are TCA treated, carefully handled and ready for bottling. Large orders are packaged in S02 packaging. This wine cork will compress to fit standard wine bottles - corker is required.
 
Going to the wine stores, they have them locally here. Just bought 100.
 
Here's the best corks and the link to buy them, there's nothing that compares. I would never buy cheap corks again after losing the batch of wine I made a few months back.
Link: http://www.widgetco.com/wine-corks-flor-quality-24-45

Flor Quality Natural Wine Corks

Suggested for wines: 12+ years old
Material: Highest Grade Natural Cork (1st of 9)
Diameter: #9 (24mm)
Length: 1-3/4" (44mm)
Fits: Standard Wine Bottles (750ml)

Natural "Flor" Wine Corks are natural wine corks intended for wine storage of 12+ years. Natural wine corks are punched from cork oak bark harvested once every 9 years, then dried for up to 2 more years. The wine corks are punched from the cork oak bark and then sorted by quality; the fewer the lenticels (crevise like imperfections) the better the wine cork. "Flor" is considered the highest quality-grade natural wine cork.

Made from 100% natural cork harvested in Portugal. All corks are TCA treated, carefully handled and ready for bottling. Large orders are packaged in S02 packaging. This wine cork will compress to fit standard wine bottles - corker is required.

I had come across this page before and I really had to ponder whether my Wife would allow a bottle to be around for that long... :)
 
I have the Port. corker and I just bottled an Island Mist wine with #8 corks that came with my equipment kit. They seemed to work okay and there are no leaks. it was also my first batch of wine and it turned out nice. I know that #8 is not good for longer storage and the Island mist wine was only done as a summer drinking wine not planning to keep it around more than the end of summer.

I am now making a Shiraz and going to make a Chianti soon, both I want to store a little longer. the Chianti I may want to keep some of that a few years to age nice and probably won't even drink any of it until its aged six months or more. I am looking at using just #9 corks from here on out too.

so what natural cork is going to work good for that? I was going to buy some of these:

http://www.midwestsupplies.com/9-premium-corks-15-16-x-1-3-4.html
they are more expensive than the other #9 but it might be worth it for a wine I want to keep around.

or what about these : http://www.midwestsupplies.com/9-straight-corks-15-16-x-1-3-4.html

I can buy them by the 100 @ a more affordable price. I may buy both and use the Premium #9 cork in the Chianti and the cheaper #9 in all other bottles that I may not plan to keep for years. just looking for other opinions.
 
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I have the Port. corker and I just bottled an Island Mist wine with #8 corks that came with my equipment kit. They seemed to work okay and there are no leaks. it was also my first batch of wine and it turned out nice. I know that #8 is not good for longer storage and the Island mist wine was only done as a summer drinking wine not planning to keep it around more than the end of summer.

I am now making a Shiraz and going to make a Chianti soon, both I want to store a little longer. the Chianti I may want to keep some of that a few years to age nice and probably won't even drink any of it until its aged six months or more. I am looking at using just #9 corks from here on out too.

so what natural cork is going to work good for that? I was going to buy some of these:

http://www.midwestsupplies.com/9-premium-corks-15-16-x-1-3-4.html
they are more expensive than the other #9 but it might be worth it for a wine I want to keep around.

or what about these : http://www.midwestsupplies.com/9-straight-corks-15-16-x-1-3-4.html

I can buy them by the 100 @ a more affordable price. I may buy both and use the Premium #9 cork in the Chianti and the cheaper #9 in all other bottles that I may not plan to keep for years. just looking for other opinions.

I use the #9 agglomerated corks and buy them by the 100 from whoever the cheapest supplier is at the time. My wines are stored a year or two. If I were ever to do long-term storage, I'd go synthetic.

Natural corks: http://www.corkstore.com/Products/Natural-Wine-Corks/Wine-Cork-Natural-9x45mm-2nd-print
 
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