Some of the agglomerate corks that George sales (I'm sure agglomerate corks, in general) indicate they have a storage life of up to 2 years.
I am assuming the "storage life" is how long they should safely last in the bottle. Am I right or does it mean how long they can be stored away before placing them in a bottle?
If they are only good in a bottle for 2 years, I'm sure that will suffice for the vast majority of kit wine. However, what type of cork should one use, if planning on holding onto a bottle of wine for more than 2 years?
A while back I bought several bottles of Sonoma County - Benziger cab/sav, that were dated 1990. When I brought them home and layed them down on their side, some of them started leaking almost immediately. Apparently, they had been stored standing up. Shame too, the non-leaking bottles were outstanding.
I don't intend on keeping my bottles standing up and I don't intend on keeping any of my own wine for 10 years, but I would like to start out with the best solution or at least know what my alternatives are.
A few days ago I read a recommendation for commercial barolo that said you should buy the wine and not even open it for another 10 years. Maybe kit barolo won't last that long but it certainly could last 4 or 5 years.
I am assuming the "storage life" is how long they should safely last in the bottle. Am I right or does it mean how long they can be stored away before placing them in a bottle?
If they are only good in a bottle for 2 years, I'm sure that will suffice for the vast majority of kit wine. However, what type of cork should one use, if planning on holding onto a bottle of wine for more than 2 years?
A while back I bought several bottles of Sonoma County - Benziger cab/sav, that were dated 1990. When I brought them home and layed them down on their side, some of them started leaking almost immediately. Apparently, they had been stored standing up. Shame too, the non-leaking bottles were outstanding.
I don't intend on keeping my bottles standing up and I don't intend on keeping any of my own wine for 10 years, but I would like to start out with the best solution or at least know what my alternatives are.
A few days ago I read a recommendation for commercial barolo that said you should buy the wine and not even open it for another 10 years. Maybe kit barolo won't last that long but it certainly could last 4 or 5 years.