by Richard Gawel
The waiter reluctantly returns a bottle of opened
wine to the kitchen. "The gentleman out there says this wine is
corked, and wants another one," he says to the manager. The manager
looks at the wine, and grudgingly replies, "What's he on about,
there's no bits of cork in there! Give him another one we don't want
a scene." I'm sure this scenario is played out daily in restaurants
and cafes throughout the world. Such is the lack of understanding
surrounding cork taint or corkiness in wine. So what is cork taint?
In practical terms, it is the biggest peril bottled
wine buyers face. It strikes sporadically, randomly and often very
ferociously. No wine, regardless of its pedigree or price, is immune.
What is worse is that it forms in the wine after bottling, and cannot
be detected until it is opened. It is the serial killer of wine. So
exactly what is it, and how prevalent is it?
Cork taint is in fact a set of very undesirable aroma
and flavour characters that are imparted to bottled wines following
contact with their cork. Six chemical compounds have been found to
contribute to cork taint. These are guaiacol, geosmin, 2-methylisoborneol
(MIB), octen-3-ol and octen-3-one; and the most important
of them all 2,4,6 trichloroanisole. TCA as it is affectionately
known is a small and chemically simple molecule. With the exception
of guaiacol, these compounds are sensorially very potent. TCA can be
detected in dry white wine and sparkling wines at levels around two
parts per trillion (0.000000000002 grams in a litre of wine), and in
red and port wines at around five parts per trillion.

The Chemical Structure of 2,4,6 Trichloroanisole
Such low concentrations are difficult to conceptualise
but it is analogous to one teaspoon in a couple of thousand olympic
sized swimming pools or one second in 32,000 years. A single gram of
pure TCA could badly taint the entire volume of wine produced in Australia
each vintage. The other less common contributors to cork taint are
not much better having sensory thresholds of around 20 parts per trillion.
So how can you tell if a wine is cork tainted?
For particularly badly tainted wines it is relatively
easy if you know what to look for. TCA which is implicated in more
than 80 per cent of cork tainted wines typically has a musty,
mouldy or wet hessian character. MIB and geosmin have an earthy/muddy aroma,
guaiacol is smoky or medicinal, and octen-3-ol and
octen-3-one smell distinctly of tinned mushrooms.
The Wine
Aroma Dictionary contains the classic smell of TCA cork
taint as well as a number of the other cork taint aromas.
While most corked wines are musty or mouldy, occasionally
one of the other characters predominates. Complex chemical mechanisms
underlie the production of TCA. The one of most importance is the conversion
of chlorophenols to chloroanisole by common microscopic fungi such
as Aspergillus sp. and Pennicilium sp., in the presence
of moisture. Chlorophenols have been used as pesticides and as wood
preservatives and as such are common environmental pollutants. The
uptake of the minutest amounts of chlorophenol by cork tree bark during
any stage of its growth, or subsequent manufacture into cork will provide
the potential for cork taint production.
Cork bleaching with hyperchlorite (less frequently
used now, peroxide bleaching is now favoured), also provide a ready
source of chlorophenols for use by these micro-organisms. TCA can also
be formed in packing materials and wooden shipping container floors.
It can then pass either through the air or by direct contact to previously
unaffected corks. For similar reasons TCA is a major contaminant of
many other foods and beverages. The exact incidence of cork taint in
Australian wines is hotly debated. Estimates range from one to seven
per cent. Australian Wine Research Institute records of the incidence
of cork taint seen by winemakers in thousands of bottles of wines opened
as part of their Advanced Wine Assessment Course suggest that the figure
is around five per cent. My experience in running sensory classes for
the winemaking degree at the University of Adelaide/Roseworthy Agricultural
College over the past decade would suggest a slightly lower rate of
around three per cent. Whatever the exact figure, it is indisputable
that cork taint is responsible for adversely modifying the sensory
properties of a great deal of bottled wine each year. Arguments by
even experienced tasters often arise over whether a wine is corked.
This is due to a number of reasons. The first is that people vary greatly
in their sensitivity to aromas, taints included. A rule of thumb is
that for a specific aroma compound, the most perceptive five per cent
of the population are about 200 times more sensitive than the bottom
five per cent. Therefore when at low levels, you can be sure that not
everyone will perceive the taint. Secondly, cork taint manifests itself
differently depending on its degree. At low levels, while not being
noticed in its own right, the TCA suppresses the wine's aroma and flavour.
Under these circumstances, comparison with other bottles is the only
way in which the taint can be confidently verified.
The taint compounds themselves also smell differently
depending on their concentration. For example, MIB is somewhat earthy
at lower concentrations but when present in large amounts has a camphorous
aroma. These shifts in the way the taint compounds smell makes them
hard to pin down in some wines. Finally to exacerbate these problems
of identification, humans quickly become adapted to the musty aroma
of TCA. Continued sniffing of a TCA affected wine can result in rapid
reductions in its perceived mustiness. In fact TCA is one of the most
strongly adaptive compounds known.
The upshot of this is if you think a wine is corked
on the first sniff, it probably is. Subsequent sniffing is far less
reliable. The question of whether a wine is corked is also complicated
by the fact that the same taints can arise not from the cork but from
wine storage in TCA-affected oak barrels. Winemakers describe this
as musty oak, and typically associate the fault with poorly maintained
old oak. However even relatively new barrels can be affected by TCA.
The wine from a single badly contaminated barrel
when blended with hundreds of others, will significantly affect the
entire blend. Such is the potency of these compounds. So if you open
a bottle of corked wine what can you do about it? In short, nothing.
Under wine conditions TCA is a very stable compound. After it leaches
into the wine shortly after bottling it will remain there outliving
the wine itself. No amount of subsequent breathing will clean up the
wine. So what can you do? You could take the wine back to where you
purchased it. The cork is simply part of the wine's packaging. If its
failure results in the wine not being of merchandisable quality then
you have the legal right to return it. Large wineries receive hundreds
of returned bottles each year on the basis of them being 'off'. Most
of these are subsequently found to be cork tainted. Alternatively you
could choose to purchase wines with alternative stoppers such as Stelvin
capsules or synthetics. However for a range of other reasons, cork
is still undeniably the stopper of choice for most consumers and producers,
and remains an important component of the wine packaging mix.
To their credit wineries and cork suppliers spend
a large portion of QC budgets on identifying tainted batches corks
before they are used research into how TCA formation is affected by
the growingmaking distribution process continuing. world without TCA?
It's must.
This article appears in The Wine Tutor: Winestate
Magazine
www.winestate.com.au
back to top