I would say that depends on how you degassed it.
Exactly - you can vacuum degass too much. Remove some of the flavor.
...it doesn't hurt the wine in any way, neither reducing sulphite or inducing flavour or aromatic deficiencies
The original research on this was done by my old friend (since passed) J E 'Ted' Underhill, at the University of Victoria, and I replicated his results in-house in the 90's. Unless you do something superbly weird or transgressive (leave it hooked up to a hard vacuum for a month, maybe) you can't budge the numbers, nor can double-blind triangle tastes find them.
Also don't whip your wine that can intruduce O2 in your wine.
I usually degas at least twice just to make sure.
Also don't whip your wine that can intruduce O2 in your wine.
I usually degas at least twice just to make sure.
I'm sorry, can you clarify what you mean by "whip"?
Because I've heard the "drill mounted rod" version of degassing referred to as whip degassing. Are you saying not to do that -- and if so, are you also implying that the only way to properly degas is either time or vacuum? Because that's a very common method of degassing.
I have not seen nor heard of any losses due to vacuuming. I do not believe that anything is lost. Is there any evidence that can be presented to prove it?Exactly - you can vacuum degass too much. Remove some of the flavor.
Yes, I posted before I read the article. I'm not a kit guy, but I respect Tim.I think the Tim Vandergrift Article in post #7 pretty much sums it all up......
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