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Wine Spectator Online    Wine Spectator Forums  Hop To Forum Categories  Learn Wine    Sparkling Wine Storage Question
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Can sparkling wine be stored on its side for short term storage?


"Drink wine! You will achieve eternal life. Wine is the only drink that will return to you your youth.- Divine season of wine and roses, of good friends! - Enjoy the fleeting moment that is your life!"
--Omar Khayam 1073-1125.
 
Posts: 59 | Location: Pennsylvania | Registered: Jan 01, 2007Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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Any wine sealed with a cork should be stored on its side. If by short term, you mean days....it doesn't really matter.

PH
 
Posts: 9259 | Location: Maryland, USA (DC suburbs) | Registered: Nov 22, 2003Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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Thanks PurpleHaze!
For some reason I thought that because sparkling wine is under pressure and carbonated that it should not be stored on its side, but the more I thought about it, I could not remember actually reading that anywhere.


"Drink wine! You will achieve eternal life. Wine is the only drink that will return to you your youth.- Divine season of wine and roses, of good friends! - Enjoy the fleeting moment that is your life!"
--Omar Khayam 1073-1125.
 
Posts: 59 | Location: Pennsylvania | Registered: Jan 01, 2007Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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Carbon dioxide is heavier than oxygen and thus hinders oxygen to come into contact with the wine, should small amounts of oxygen leak into the bottle past the cork. Consequently you can store sparkling wine in upright position.

There is an argument that in an upright position the wine does not come into contact with the cork, and as such cork taint would not be transferred to the wine. I have however heard anecdotal evidence of TCA transferring without actual physical contact with the wine, so if that holds true, it would mean the argument is of no consequence.

But the fact remains that it is easier for me to store my bottles horizontally than vertically and that is the only factor that has any influence on my choice of positioning of my sparklers.
 
Posts: 1462 | Location: Sydney, NSW, Oz | Registered: Jun 03, 2003Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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The prospect of storing a pressurized bottle upright thus allowing the cork to dry and perhaps become less effective as a closure doesn't seem like a good idea to me, Markus.

PH
 
Posts: 9259 | Location: Maryland, USA (DC suburbs) | Registered: Nov 22, 2003Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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What you say is totally logical, PH, but conventional wisdom seems to be that upright storage, even if the cork becomes dry, is not injurious to Champagne. We visited a Napa wine maker where we saw his private (impressive) cellar and all his Champagnes were standing upright. He says the seal is made when the cork is put on, the pressure from the wire keeps it constant, and the layer of gas below the cork prevents oxidation. Ergo, upright storage. It seems to make sense.

We had a bit of discussion about Champagne corks here a while back, though I don't know that it sheds any more light on the issue.


___________________________

Cheers!
 
Posts: 5870 | Location: Vancouver, BC | Registered: Oct 17, 2001Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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PH,

I agree with Sequam but in addition to what Sequam said, I should point out that I'm not convinced by the entire keeping-the-cork-moist argument.

Modern corks are coated with a film of silicone and paraffin, both hydrophobic substances, and thus as far as I can understand a cork would not be affected by moisture unless that film is faulty.

The question is acedemic to me onlyI do store my wine bottles horizontally, as the headspace in an upright bottle allows for oxygen to gather there in case there is an ingress of air (except in the case of sparkling wine), as compared to a horizontal bottle where the wine is pressed firmly towards the cork.
 
Posts: 1462 | Location: Sydney, NSW, Oz | Registered: Jun 03, 2003Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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And, in Australia, they store champagne upside down! Wink


Irwin

I'd give my right arm to be ambidextrous

 
Posts: 3603 | Location: Baltimore, MD | Registered: Feb 04, 2003Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
kca
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That's because they are on the bottom of the earth.


"We do not remember days, we remember moments."
 
Posts: 66 | Location: Colorado | Registered: May 11, 2006Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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I store mine lying down in the wine cellar, but I don't keep Champagne very long.


Just one more sip.
 
Posts: 21874 | Location: NY | Registered: Oct 18, 2001Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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