I have been told this and always wondered why. They (wine and whiskey) both have corks so I wanted to get some facts on this.
I have been told this and always wondered why. They (wine and whiskey) both have corks so I wanted to get some facts on this.
As he removed the cork from the bottle of bourbon, he threw it across the room and said, "we ain't gonna need that no more".
The greater alcohol level (45% and higher) of whiskey will dissolve the cork.
See this thread: http://www.straightbourbon.com/forum...ead.php?t=3399
Scott
"Remember that your sense of humor is inversely proportional to your level of intolerance."
- Serge Storms
I'm hope someone more knoweldgable than I will reply, but my understanding is that with wine, you want to keep the liquid in contact with the cork to prevent it from drying out, cracking and letting oxygen in.
With whiskey and other distilled spirits, minor leaks in oxygen due to dry cork are less of a threat. In addition, I think I've heard concerns that becasue of its high alcohol content, prolonged contact between whiskey and cork could actually erode the cork.
Alcohol is a fairly powerful solvent in high concentrations. And while wine traditionally has been closed with a cork, there are quite a few advantages to synthetic corks and screw caps.
Last edited by barturtle; 04-07-2008 at 23:08.
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