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Dear Wine Wizard,
I’ve heard both “yes” and “no” on soaking corks before bottling.
All of the commercial wineries I’ve visited don’t soak their corks
before bottling. Can you set us straight on whether to soak or not to
soak?
Jack Anders
Lindenwold, New Jersey
Wine Wizard replies: No commercial wineries that I’ve worked
with soak their corks before bottling because it’s not necessary for
larger-scale businesses. Commercial wineries buy corks by the thousands
from reputable companies with high turnover. They buy full bags and
only order enough for their scheduled bottling runs, ensuring that
small excess quantities aren’t left over to dry out, get dusty and
become unusable over time. They ensure that their suppliers (the cork
companies) test for moisture content, screen for TCA and spoilage
microbes and deliver fresh, clean, ready-to-use corks. The corks come
right out of the hermetically sealed, sulfur-dioxide sparged,
factory-packed plastic bag.
The problem for small-scale and boutique winemakers is that it can
be harder (not to mention more expensive, since they can’t match a big
winery’s economy of scale) to procure such a high quality and
consistent cork supply. This is probably, in a roundabout way, the
reason why many small operations continue to soak their corks even in
the face of better overall cork quality.
Finding the reason is as easy as answering the following question:
Who tends to be on the bottom of the cork supply food chain? Not
commercial wineries, which are large, repeat customers but the small
mom and pop home winemaking retailer, who maybe only order one bag of
1,000 corks at a time (enough for about three barrels of wine), a few
times a year. Since their home winemaker customers tend to buy corks in
small quantities, the well-intentioned shopkeeper rips open the sealed
bag from the cork factory and divvies them into their own plastic
baggies. Even worse, some retailers just tip their corks loose into
bulk bins for customers to paw through, selecting the exact number of
corks they want. Since all of this breaking-down of the standard-sized
1,000-cork bag makes for dried-out, dusty and potentially contaminated
corks, it’s no wonder that small-scale winemakers have historically
doused their corks in a strong sulfite solution in an attempt to
mitigate these potential threats!
Luckily, these days stores and Websites that supply small-scale
winemakers are understanding the importance of cork quality more and
more. Most do their best to keep corks in the original suppliers’ bags
or, if they must break down orders, to gas plastic bags with sulfur
dioxide, which retards the growth of microbes. Similarly, retailers
understand that they can’t keep last year’s corks around for this
vintage’s clients and will destroy (or turn into decorative cork
boards) inventory that has passed its expiration date.
So, should you soak your corks or not before you use them? If you
are fortunate enough to order your corks direct from the factory, in a
sealed bag, you don’t need to, unless it helps you slip the cork into
the bottle easier with your hand corker. Similarly, if you buy your
corks from a winemaking supply store that you know has a lot of
customers and a high turnover of their cork inventory, you probably
don’t need to rinse or soak your corks either. If, however, you aren’t
in either of the above camps and don’t know how long your corks have
been exposed to the air, where they came from or how old they are, it
might be a good idea — or at the least it’ll make you feel like you’re
doing something to help.
I think this is where most of our good-intentioned soaking of corks
comes from. Since we know we may have to (at least in some situations)
accept less-than-ideal corks, we feel that a quick dip in a 70 ppm
sulfite solution spiked with 1 g/L of tartaric acid (one of the many
sulfite cocktails I’ve seen in use) may at least rinse the dust away
and retard some surface-dwelling bad guys. Unfortunately, the reality
is that once a cork has dried out and a mold colony has invaded its
nooks and crannies, there’s very little that a winemaker can do,
whether working for a top of the line facility or simply making it work
in their garage. Even a rigorous wash in a sulfite solution, or any
other available sanitizing compound — no matter how strong — won’t be
able to do much. Wash corks in water that isn’t sulfited and you may
even increase the chance of infecting your corks by providing
opportunistic microorganisms with a source of moisture.
So what’s a small-scale winemaker to do? Make sure that you buy
your corks from a reputable supplier with high turnover. Never take
chances on old, dried out corks that could spoil your wine or cause
your bottles to leak.
Better yet, to ensure the best cork quality, go in with a group of
friends or your local winemaking club and place “real winery” orders in
multiples of 1,000 corks at a time in sealed bags.
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