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Can you really judge a bottle of wine based on the closure used to seal it? You’re not supposed to, but a lot of us do, ...
If you're a wine drinker, you've probably noticed that screw caps are no longer considered the closure just for cheap vino. Increasingly, bottles of very good wines are unscrewed, rather than ...
While browsing for wines, your instinct may be to reach for the bottles that require a corkscrew rather than those with a screw cap. But which is actually better: bottles under cork, or bottles ...
She says they accounted for almost 45% in 2018 and that, “…screw caps make up about 32% of the global [wine bottle] closure market.” As covered by Stacy Briscoe in Wine Business Monthly ...
Still wary of wine bottles sealed with a screw cap? While that might have been understandable years ago, today screw caps are gaining popularity, and for good reason. Here are four reasons why ...
Many fine wines designed for cellaring are now sealed with screw caps. The point is to avoid the modern scourge of cork taint, a foul-smelling defect caused by a fungus that randomly attacks cork ...
About thirty percent of the wine on offer at Chicago's Embeya—a modern pan-Asian restaurant with French accents—is screw cap. And, according to owner and wine director Attila Gyulai ...
A: It is 100 per cent safe to store screw-capped bottles upright. The wadding under the aluminium cap – that little disc that sits inside the cap – is the seal and, unlike cork, doesn’t need ...
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