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Bark to Bottle
Bark to Bottle, Issue #26, December 2009

Advances in cork processing and quality control procedures have led to a dramatic reduction in TCA levels.
TCA NO LONGER A PROBLEM SAYS U.S. INDUSTRY LEADER

A leading American professor of enology and wine judge has stated that TCA is no longer a major problem for the United States wine industry.

In a report published in the May/June 2009 edition of ‘Vineyard & Winery Management’, Dr Christian Butzke said TCA was no longer a major issue from both a consumer and winemaker perspective.

Considered one of the leading wine experts in the US, Dr Butzke is a professor of enology at Indiana’s Purdue University and is president-elect of the American Society for Enology and Viticulture.

The director of winemaking at Sakonnet Vineyards from 2002 to 2005, Butzke is also a member of the LLC managing committee of the Unified Wine & Grape Symposium and chairman and chief judge for the Indy International Wine Competition — one of the largest wine competitions in the US.

From his experience reviewing the thousands of international and US wines submitted to the Indy International Wine Competition, Dr Butzke says he believes cork has achieved a performance rate exceeding 99 per cent.

Amorim’s director of marketing and communications, Carlos de Jesus, said it was refreshing to hear industry leaders acknowledging the progress that has been made by the cork industry in recent years.

“As Dr Butzke’s assessment suggests, the problems associated with TCA contamination are now a rarity and this is evident in both scientific analysis and anecdotally,” he said.

"As with any other product or service, promises of perfection are difficult to deliver, but Amorim will continue aiming higher and higher when it comes to the performance of our products. We look at strong figures such as those presented by Dr Butzke as a great departure point, never as the limit of natural cork’s performance capabilities.

"While some commentators continue to live in the past when talking about natural cork, we know from our discussions with winemakers on all continents that the industry recognises the progress that has been made."

A number of independent analyses provide scientific evidence of the improvement in cork’s performance and particularly the drop in the incidence of 2,4,6-trichloroanisole (TCA) contamination.

The US-based Cork Quality Council, for example, shows a dramatic reduction in TCA levels in bulk cork imports since 2001. The average TCA count has dropped from 4.0 nanograms (parts per trillion) several years ago to less than 1.0 nanogram — well below human sensory thresholds.

Meanwhile, Decanter.com has reported that one of Australia’s leading wine brands, Penfolds, is in the very early stages of trialing a glass stopper that might imitate the oxygen exchange provided by natural cork. Chief winemaker at Penfolds Peter Gago maintains that oxygen exchange is essential for the development of fine wine and he told Decanter.com that if you can neutralise the problem of TCA, cork "can’t be beaten" as a wine closure.


‘SAVE MIGUEL’ WINS AT OENOVIDEO

Amorim’s innovative ‘Save Miguel’ video has won two prestigious awards at Oenovideo — the International Grape and Wine Film Festival.

The production was awarded ‘Best Original Screenplay’ and collected the ‘Peoples’ Choice Award’ at an awards ceremony held at Palais du Luxembourg in Paris recently.

At the ceremony, Oenovideo organisers acknowledged Save Miguel director Sean Ashcroft together with leading American director Martin Scorsese and British director Howard Greenhalgh, whose short films also collected awards.

The world’s oldest festival dedicated to the value of the image of grapes and wine through cinema, Oenovideo was staged at Nuits-Saint-Georges in Burgundy in May. Almost 100 films from 12 countries were entered in the competition and of these only 12 received awards.

The Save Miguel video features Hollywood actor Rob Schneider. It is the cornerstone of an online educational campaign designed to promote the environmental qualities of cork oak forests and natural cork products as well as highlight the positive impact of purchasing wine with natural cork closures.

In the video, Schneider embarks on a quest to find ‘Miguel’ and save him. Following an amusing journey he discovers that Miguel is in fact a mature cork oak tree in the Portuguese forests.

“Everyone involved in the production is thrilled that it was acknowledged at this year’s Oenovideo festival,” said Amorim’s director of marketing and communications Carlos de Jesus.

“It was particularly pleasing to win the Peoples’ Choice Award as this shows the environmental messages struck a chord with festival patrons.”

For more information visit www.savemiguel.com

 
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