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Wine Age And Flavor
Annie Hall’s balcony scene discerning what-they-speak
and what-they-actually-mean is an absolute classic. |
Does Wine Really Taste
Better With Age?
Akash Peshin
An estimate reveals that 90% of wines are supposed to be
consumed within one year, while 99% should be consumed within five.
Even the most novice of wine tasters can distinguish the
difference between an old and a new wine by the excitement of their taste buds.
The shameless use of the notion that the wine gets better with age as a metaphor to
describe artists or sportspersons who have become more adept with age has
rendered it a bit stale and tasteless.
The saccharine taste of wine was found to be equally irresistible
by the Greeks, Romans and Annie Hall.
However, while Annie Hall adored it for it’s an infallible social
lubricant, the prudent ancients delighted in its longevity.
However, they weren’t exclusively saving some wine for later.
The Romans prized older wines because they tended to taste and smell more
pleasant.
Even the Bible mentions the
amenities of aged wines: “And no one, after drinking old wine desires new,
for he says, ‘The old is good.’”
The truth is, not all wines taste better with age.
Pigeonholing the nature of wine in this fashion can be dangerous;
storing a bottle of wine in a cellar and planning to enjoy it within a year
will irreversibly spoil it.
In fact, an estimate reveals
that 90% of wines are supposed to be consumed within one year, while 99% should
be consumed within five.
Furthermore, if this is true, how can I know when to scrap my
bottle of Cabernet before it’s too late such
that it doesn’t ruin my date with my cats?
Tannins
The taste of wine is dominated by a combination of sugar and
acids, but most importantly, tannins.
Tannins are phenolic compounds found in the stems, seeds and skin
of red or black grapes.
A surplus of tannin is the reason why younger wines tend to taste
so bitter. They bind with proteins that absorb your saliva, making your mouth
dry and chalky, imitating the effect of eating a green banana or an unripe
mango.
The taste formally known as “astringent” fades away as the tannins
react with the neighboring sugars and acids to form heavier compounds that are
too heavy to be held suspended in the solution.
The compounds settle down, consequently altering a wine’s color,
taste, aroma and texture.
The complex reaction, coupled with protracted time, doesn’t
necessarily guarantee a wine with a delightful flavor; there’s a good
possibility that the reactions could, on the contrary, give the wine some
truly vile characteristics.
Tannins are actually defensive compounds that deter fungi. They
are tenacious preservatives, and despite making an unripe grape taste really
nasty, they can make a bottle palatable for over 40 years.
However, tannins aren’t the only compounds that deserve the
limelight. For instance, wines boasting a lesser pH are known to taste better
than wines that are less acidic.
Because the characteristics of a wine depend equally on the
amounts of all its contents, the bottom line is that how well a wine will age
must be determined by a ratio of all these compounds.
External factors
A glass of oxidized wine is certainly more flavorful than a glass
of suffocated wine.
In the company of oxygen, tannins mature more conveniently to
please our cheeks, gums and tongue. A wine’s acids instill the patience in
tannins to neutralize individual oxygen molecules
However, the tannins’ patience is overwhelmed when the oxygen
creeps in at a higher rate. This ruins the wine, just like the browning of an
apple when it is assailed by a surge of oxygen.
Temperature changes also alter the characteristics of a wine.
Wines are very sensitive to temperature, because increased
temperature fuels oxidation, causing a wine to age prematurely and rendering it
undrinkable.
55 degrees Fahrenheit is known to be an ideal temperature to store
wines.
Finally, humidity is also an equal cause for concern. Increased
humidity leads to the build-up of mold around the cork, while inferior humidity
causes the cork to crumble.
A crumbled cork represents a window that is left ajar just enough
to let oxygen sneak in.
When should you drink your wine
before it’s too late?
Like your mid-20s, every bottle of wine goes through a period of
time when it reaches its zenith of potency.
Determining this period, which varies from bottle to bottle,
is something that even semi-professionals or professionals are inept at.
Consulting a winery or winemaker is the optimum thing to do while
investigating how well your wine will age or when it will attain its peak
flavor.
A winemaker is someone who determines the number of
tannins by controlling the time of exposure to the skin, stems and seeds,
which requires exceptional knowledge of grapes.
Only a certain species of grapes has the perfect balance of
sugars, acids and tannins to assure longevity.
These grapes tend to grow in long, brisk summers and cold, but not
bleak, winters. Only a true expert can make an educated guess about how weather
affects tannins and the development of the fruit within the grapes.
Back in 2015, they found a
150-year-old bottle of wine of the Civil War-era from a shipwreck. Guess how
the wine tasted?
Not good.
Akash Peshin is an Electronic Engineer from the University of
Mumbai, India and a science writer at ScienceABC. Enamored with science ever
since discovering a picture book about Saturn at the age of 7, he believes that
what fundamentally fuels this passion is his curiosity and appetite for wonder.
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