Tips - Wine Aging

Unlike most food and drink, wine can improve for years. This was not always so. Without the understanding
that poor wine making, dirty storage containers, and exposure to air can cause a wine to quickly turn
to vinegar, most of wine making history was operated on the assumption that the best wine was the
newest wine. And so it was.
The Romans however, found that if a wine was placed in a tightly closed container it could improve
with age without going bad. Some Roman wines were successfully kept as long as 100 years. Unfortunately,
much of this insight disappeared along with the Empire.
From that time to this, wines have been aged with varying degrees of success. But it wasn't until
the rediscovery of the cork – the Romans used it – and the improvement of the bottle, that aging
wines went to a whole new level. Until the 1600's, bottles were fragile and quite expensive. The
English were to change all this. By proclamation of King James I, all glass makers were to stop
using wood to heat their furnaces so as to not deplete the forests. The glass makers turned to
burning coal which allowed for a much hotter fire. Sir Kenelm Digby is credited as the inventor
of the modern wine bottle. With the use of a blower to make the furnace even hotter, Digby was
able to make bottles that were thicker and stronger and with the unknown benefit of being darker.
They could also be produced much cheaper than the old method. Married to the cork, it was to become
the perfect container for the maturing of wines. After a period of cautious integration, we finally
see in the 1700's, wines made on a large scale deliberately for bottle ageing.
Of course, not all wines are meant to be aged. Most of the wines of the world are meant to be drunk
young while they still possess their youth and freshness. Most of the wines that are destined to the
cellar are red. Very few white wines need time to mature. For this reason, most white wines are
purchased on an as needed basis. With that said, there's no doubt that all wine will benefit from
even a few days rest after bringing it home.
In general, red wines will benefit more from bottle aging than white wines. Red wines contain a higher
concentration of tannins which require some aging to soften into less bitter component. As well, an
oaked wine will benefit more than a non-oaked wine. The majority of our wine will benefit from some
bottling aging.
The ultimate test is truly personal preference. In other words, if wine tastes good today -
enjoy it today!
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