
WINE BOTTLE STORAGE AND TEMPERATURE
- Cooler Is Better
When storing your precious homemade wine for the
long-term--after
it has been bottled--it is usually understood that
cooler is
better. Most wine experts agree that the ultimate
storage temp-
erature for most bottled wines is 55 degrees F.
Cooler temperatures slow down the effects of oxidation.
The same
is true with reduced light exposure. Both help to reduce
the
symptoms caused by having too much oxygen in a wine.
But, don't get too hung up on temperature. The
improvement is
only marginal for each degree you go down in
temperature. For
instance, a 65 degree basement is much, much better than
an 75
degree dinning room. This 10 degree improvement is a
major
benefit. But a 55 degree storage area is only marginally
better
than a room that is 65 degrees.
While there is some benefit by going on down to 55
degrees F.
from 65 degrees, it is only minor as compared to getting
the wine
away from a 75 degree F. room.
- Minimize Temperature Fluctuations
Your focus can be better served by finding a reasonably
cool
place to store your wine that has a stable temperature.
For
example, if I had a choice of storing my wine in a room
that was
a constant 65 degrees or a room that had temperatures
that
fluctuated between 45 and 65 all the time, without
question I
would choose the stable 65 degree room.
Temperature change is hard on a bottle of wine. It wears
the wine
down. Eventually, this constant rise and fall in
temperature will
give the wine a flabby flavor, weak aroma and a
character that
lacks depth or complexity. Please realize that this does
not
happen overnight, but with each rise and fall in
temperature the
wine will lose just a little bit more of its quality
each time.
- How Temperature Changes Affect A Wine
The reason for this deterioration in quality is because
of
expansion and contraction. Changes in temperature causes
things
to expand and contract. But not all things expand and
contract
the same amount.
In the case of a bottle of wine, both the glass bottle
and the
wine itself expand and contract along with temperature
changes.
But they expand to different degrees. The wine in the
bottle
expands and contracts much more so than the glass bottle
in which
it is being contained.
So as the temperature of the bottle of wine rises, the
wine
inside expands more so than the glass. This causes
pressure
within the bottle. In turn, this pressure causes a small
amount
of the wine's aroma or bouquet to slowly escape through
the cork.
In more rapid temperature changes there may also be some
notice-
able seepage of the wine itself through the cork. But
this is
only half of the story.
When this bottle is cooled back down again, the wine
contracts
more than the glass causing a vacuum within the bottle.
As a
result air is slowly sucked through the cork into the
bottle.
So what you have is a situation where a wine's good
aroma is
being exchanged for bad, damaging air with each up and
down cycle
of temperature. One could say that the bottle is
actually
breathing with each cycle. It exhales its bouquet; and
inhales
oxidative air--not a good trade.
When this temperature change cycle happens two or three
times
through the life of a bottle of wine, not much effect in
quality
is noticed. But when this happens on a continual bases,
then
there is usually a detectable change for the worse.
- Check Your Temperatures
If you are not sure where you stand with your wine
storage area,
it might be in your best interest to monitor the
different
temperatures that occur over a given period of time.
You might surprise yourself. Quite often areas thought
to have
stable temperatures such as fruit cellars or closed off
portions
of basements, in fact, can have daily temperature
fluctuations as
high as 5 to 10 degrees.
- Related Article:
"Controlling Oxidation In Your Homemade Wines"
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E. C. Kraus
Home Wine & Beer Making Supplies
Address: 733 S. Northern Blvd. - P. O. Box 7850 - Independence, MO 64053
Phone:(816) 254-7448 Fax:(816) 254-7051 Toll Free: (800) 353-1906
Email: customerservice@eckraus.com
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