GK wrote:
Thanks. The design of the glass 'encourages' more bubble release, good stuff.
I suppose there is a set amount of disolved CO2 in the wine and the quicker the release the better the experience, given the most recent find. Makes sense.
I wasn't going to let either of you get away with that snappy analysis. Essentially because it assumes that all bubbles are of a uniform size and that you appear to suggest that the favour is enhanced by a quick explosion of bubbles. INMHO poor primary flavour is masked ! Think Alka Selza in cold tap.........
....
ascerbic acid and baking powder.
My experience is rather different. I have found that when I'm offrered an expensive or fine vintage champagne, the bubble are much smaller and persistent over a much longer period. Further, the mousse on a cheap champagne is rather like fizzy pop, and has little flavour - it meerly runs up the nose at the back of the throat (masking it's true end flavour) and induces a sneeze or hic-cup. A fine champagne has a much deeper flavour, and creamy mousse that is subtle, yet engaging in the mouth. A champagne that blows itself out quickly covering your nose with spray, generally tastes wretched when flat, and of cheap extra tart or sour chardonnay when sipped gently !
Sorry guys - there is much more too it than a headline grabbing science lab report
I will admit that an extra cold blow out cheapo, does appear to gain acidity and zing for 3 minutes, but as soon as that subsides, you are left with something rather horrid by comparison to the good'uns.
Pelorus - Cloudy Bay's champagne (method champagnoise) is very good when sipped over an extended period, lasting flavour, good length, not tart. Vintage Taittinger has a very delicate mousse, and tastes just as good, but different, when nearly flat - Just fuller and with more body (ripe Clos de Mouches perhaps). Equally, vintage Pol Roger tastes of ready 1er Chablis when nearly flat, a fine mousse and some body, lovely dimensional length.
GK - Just in case you are going to whack me for drinking snobby champers, These are the ones that are memorable. GK - "
when I took my WSET exams" WSET ?
BTW - I dont know If any of you remember the year year when Tesco finest Premier Cru Chardonnay and Pinot Noir Champers won a load of awards in a Christmas 2007 blind tasting (the 2005 vintage). I kept some back, and cracked one for the Misses last weekend. It was fab for the dosh, ready, a fine persistent mousse, Toasty, high bake Bath Olivers, vanilla, sweet yeasts as in home made bread with little salt, lovely full fruit, a streak of very ripe lemons in there, not too dry. Yummy -
But no explosion of bubbles