Here are some friends with simlar question as we.And I have this question for many days,anyone help us?
Kitty said: Yes.Why do so many German riesling bottles look tainted?-I try seach this on internet but no results found.Maybe this is a stupid question.
Mike said: oh,no,you are wrong.I have found as below for this question(Why do so many German riesling bottles look tainted?),it will help you,my kids.
In my experience, I've come across many German riesling bottles which have sticky, gooey foil caps and dried, sticky wine stains running down the side which normally would make me suspicious of the wine's condition. However, I've never had one that was corked or oxidized, in spite of the outward appearance. Do they just tend to overfill their bottles on the bottling line?
Answer:
I work in a supermarket and none of our German riesling bottles has ever had this happen. You might want to shop elsewhere if you feel there is something wrong with those bottles at that particular store. All our wine bottles are clean and I have never seen this. As for the reason I cannot explain, sorry.
WHAT?
It actually happens with any wine that has a higher-than-average sugar content. When the bottle is in a pressurized environment (like an airplane for transport) or if it's stored at the wrong temperature, the cork can leak the wine. This doesn't happen with red wines or chardonnays because the sugar content is much less.
The problem may lie with super sweet German rieslings that are corked with real cork. The sugars in the wines could go through the cork and cause the staining and stickiness you are talking about.
i hope there not
Not that unusual. The answers here relating to sugar content are correct, however there is a reason for this high sugar. High acid in the grape. the higher the acid, the more sugar you can put in it, the more sugar you can put in it, the higher the alcohol content. The higher the acid and alcohol content, the longer it will keep. The longer you shelf a wine, the better the chances are on seal leakage.
Its because Germany has one of the most advance recycling system in the planet. So the chances are the vessel thats holding your german reisling has held other germans reisling before.
German beer is verry stout stuff don;t worrie about the sticky stuff it is all good rinse it off in water
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Kitty said: Yes.Why do so many German riesling bottles look tainted?-I try seach this on internet but no results found.Maybe this is a stupid question.
Mike said: oh,no,you are wrong.I have found as below for this question(Why do so many German riesling bottles look tainted?),it will help you,my kids.
In my experience, I've come across many German riesling bottles which have sticky, gooey foil caps and dried, sticky wine stains running down the side which normally would make me suspicious of the wine's condition. However, I've never had one that was corked or oxidized, in spite of the outward appearance. Do they just tend to overfill their bottles on the bottling line?
Answer:
I work in a supermarket and none of our German riesling bottles has ever had this happen. You might want to shop elsewhere if you feel there is something wrong with those bottles at that particular store. All our wine bottles are clean and I have never seen this. As for the reason I cannot explain, sorry.
WHAT?
It actually happens with any wine that has a higher-than-average sugar content. When the bottle is in a pressurized environment (like an airplane for transport) or if it's stored at the wrong temperature, the cork can leak the wine. This doesn't happen with red wines or chardonnays because the sugar content is much less.
The problem may lie with super sweet German rieslings that are corked with real cork. The sugars in the wines could go through the cork and cause the staining and stickiness you are talking about.
i hope there not
Not that unusual. The answers here relating to sugar content are correct, however there is a reason for this high sugar. High acid in the grape. the higher the acid, the more sugar you can put in it, the more sugar you can put in it, the higher the alcohol content. The higher the acid and alcohol content, the longer it will keep. The longer you shelf a wine, the better the chances are on seal leakage.
Its because Germany has one of the most advance recycling system in the planet. So the chances are the vessel thats holding your german reisling has held other germans reisling before.
German beer is verry stout stuff don;t worrie about the sticky stuff it is all good rinse it off in water
correctness,It's Non-profit and only for informational purposes.
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