dessertmaker
Senior Member
- Joined
- Aug 17, 2012
- Messages
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clight385 said:You can also get a capper attachment for the Italian corker.
Only the Italian? I thought you could get a capper attachment with both!
clight385 said:You can also get a capper attachment for the Italian corker.
If you don't make very much wine very often, the hand corker will do. Once you do invest in a floor corker, it will last many many years.
I believe one of a home wine maker's first investments should be a floor corker. A vacuum pump is also right up there. A good free SO2 test setup is really good to have; the longer you make wine, the more not having one will haunt you.
If you are making something besides kit wines, a pH meter is very important.
But a person has to make do with what a person has.
I also was always afraid I would knock the bottle over while inserting the cork; never happened, though.
Funny you should say that as I have corked quite a few by hand and just had the first one tip over last weekend. I usually don't partake in drinking while bottling but this time I did and that may have played a part.
I wanted to see how many times you can put a cork in a screwcaps bottle before it breaks.
The answer is 5.
beggarsu said:To do a proper test you need a control. IE You have to cork a a cork-neck bottle as many times as possible to find it's breaking point. And also do like about 10-20 of each.
There was a guy on another gorum who cirked a screw top and had to hsve about 5 surgeries on his gand and nerves reattached! Im pretty dure after all was said he lost like 75% movement of that hand! Cheap isnt always inexpendive and you usually pay dearly later!!!!!
I knew it was an old post. I thought he was trying to be funny - all the typos along with the wording appeared as if he were the guy who had severely cut his hand by recorking and uncorking a screw-top bottle. Gee, now it looks as if it was completely accidental and I made fun of him. I thought it odd that no one commented on the apparent funny.Keith, that was an old post from Wade when he was still trying to learn how to use his smartless phone.
Yeap Davolous is correct you can use corks in screw cap bottles. You may even get away with it for a year or two. The issue is the neck is thinner than a cork bottle. You risk it breaking during corking or uncorking. I have personally seen it happen several times and one person was cut pretty bad. Why would you put yourself, spouse or friend at such risk, especially knowing the risk before you did it. Practice safe corking!
What about the black with the clear plug inside:
Are they worth using?
How long can you shelf wine with them?
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