Cellar Vader
Senior Member
I have read "numerous" posts here regarding corks breaking. My situation is as follows:
I have a WE Eclipse Lodi Old Vines Zinfandel that is now 9 months in the bottle (which I have every intent on aging 2 years before breakout.) Upon opening the first bottle for a "peak" taste last night, my cork broke about 2/3's down. This is called an "Aglica" cork (#9 x1 3/4), which is agglomated and I wasn't aware that this could be an issue. The bottles have been on their sides since bottling day, and have somehow soaked the cork to the point where the end 1/3 is rather soft.
I have read numerous suggestion to other posts that you can simply "re-cork" them.
Question: Is there an inherent risk to the potential life of this wine in doing so? Let's say the air contact time may be 10 or 15 seconds before the replacement cork goes in for each one.
I have a WE Eclipse Lodi Old Vines Zinfandel that is now 9 months in the bottle (which I have every intent on aging 2 years before breakout.) Upon opening the first bottle for a "peak" taste last night, my cork broke about 2/3's down. This is called an "Aglica" cork (#9 x1 3/4), which is agglomated and I wasn't aware that this could be an issue. The bottles have been on their sides since bottling day, and have somehow soaked the cork to the point where the end 1/3 is rather soft.
I have read numerous suggestion to other posts that you can simply "re-cork" them.
Question: Is there an inherent risk to the potential life of this wine in doing so? Let's say the air contact time may be 10 or 15 seconds before the replacement cork goes in for each one.