Monthly Archives: April 2023

Corks Versus Screw Caps: Which Is Better?

A recent report from Wine.com that correlated high-quality wines with cork closures got me thinking about corks and screw caps. Since April is Earth Month, it’s a good time to explore natural cork closures versus metal screw caps and answer the burning question: which is less harmful to the environment?

Where Do Corks Come From?

Cork comes from the cork oak and Portugal is home to 34% of them, with another 28% of the world’s cork oaks in neighboring Spain. Growing and harvesting cork is a long-term investment. It takes 25 years for a cork oak to yield its first harvest – and that first harvest nets cork that is not useable for wine or spirit bottles. The earliest that the next harvest can be made: nine years. And that second harvest is still not good enough quality for wine corks. It takes a minimum of 43 years to get the first harvest of cork that can be used for bottle closures!

Harvesting cork is not easy. Harvest happens in June, July and August – and in Alentejo, those months are hot, averaging 89°F. Highly skilled and trained harvest workers are paid €150 per day to carefully carve bark from the trees with a very sharp tool, and take great care to not damage the tree.

Cork is a Super Sustainable Natural Resource

Cork oaks aren’t irrigated and no pesticides or fertilizers are used, making them low-maintenance. Plus, black pigs eat the acorns that fall from cork oaks, so they are an important part of an entire ecosystem.

On top of it all, cork has a negative carbon footprint. Cork forests are great at carbon sequestration, as the trees absorb carbon from the atmosphere, and they are lightweight in transit. In fact, studies have shown that a single wine cork can offset the entire carbon footprint of the glass bottle in which it is put.

Most consumers associate cork with higher-end wines and year upon year cork closures are the preference for wines that earn the highest scores, regardless of price point. The conclusion cited in a APCOR (Portuguese Cork Association) report that “the best decision a novice consumer can make when choosing wine is to purchase a wine sealed with a cork.”

This begs the question of Australian wines, which are known for being mostly under screwcap. But that may be changing, according to APCOR’s Operational Director, Carlos de Jesus. “For three years in a row – from 2017 – to 2019 – use of cork in Australia grew by 33% each year.”

According to de Jesus this can be attributed to three things: the growth of sparkling wines in Australia (which only use cork closures), the younger generation of winemakers who aren’t interested in making the next “$2.99 screwcap Chardonnay,” and the massive importance of the image-obsessed Chinese market on Australian wines until the tariffs of March 2021.

Some Background on Screwcaps

Screw caps do come from factories, but this makes them low cost and consistent. They are made from aluminum and/or tin and plastic, and the metal components can be recycled indefinitely. Amcor, the company that produces the popular Stelvin brand of screw cap, has pledged to make all their packaging components recyclable by 2025.

While natural cork is recyclable, facilities that recycle corks are few and far between. The good news is that cork is biodegradable, so even in a landfill, corks are fairly harmless. Aluminum and plastic screw caps can be recycled, but obviously are not biodegradable.

Of course there is the ease of use when it comes to a screwcap. Sure there is an elegance to using a wine key and allure of popping a cork at dinner or really anytime when sharing wine with friends. But there are also those days when you are traveling for work, TSA took your corkscrew way, and all you want is a glass of wine at the end of a long day. The simple screwcap is your friend on these occasions, as much as learning to open a wine bottle with the heel of your shoe is an entertaining life hack.

But What About Cork Taint?

Cork has long been held as the culprit of cork tainted wines. This common wine flaw is in a chemical reaction of fungi, mold, and lignin reacting with fungicides, insecticides, and hypochlorite, aka bleach, which are collectively known as halophenols. The resulting compound, 2,4,6-Trichloroanisole, or TCA, stays on the cork impacting the smell and taste of the wine. In pronounced examples this will make your wine smell like wet cardboard, musty basement, or wet dog. In milder cases this will result in a wine that smells and tastes muted with the typical fruit characteristics just lacking. Either way, you will always notice as corked wine as the off flavors become more pronounced with time and oxygen.

While TCA is not harmful to ingest, those faulty aromas and flavors can ruin a wine experience. So with time and research, the cork industry has invested heavily in finding ways to minimize and even eliminate the presence of TCA in corks. In fact de Jesus, said, “The sweet irony is that as long as cork has been defeated by TCA, it has now become the best defense against TCA.”

He is referring to processes that have been developed to get rid of TCA in corks. These processes can be expensive, but for wineries and winemakers who make “safe” corks a priority, it’s a good investment.

Alex Sokol Blosser, president of Sokol Blosser Winery in Willamette Valley, Oregon, explained why they use the DIAM™ natural corks on their wines. “It’s natural cork that gets ground up into flakes and then goes through a sort of “decaffeinating” process that removes any TCA. Then the cork is then reassembled into one piece with beeswax, so it’s a win-win!” He notes that since Sokol Blosser started using DIAM corks in 2008, they have not had one corked bottle of wine.

Screw caps also can reduce the possibility of TCA, but as de Jesus said, “Cork is not the only carrier of TCA – it can be present in fruits, vegetables, coffee beans, even plastics – and even, sometimes, screw caps.”

Decisions and Choices

In speaking with winemakers, the preference for cork was unanimous, because of the sustainability. “I prefer using corks over screwcaps because cork is a more sustainable product,” said Marisa Taylor, an independent Napa Valley winemaker.

Ana Diogo, director of winemaking at Artesa in Napa Valley agrees. “Cork closures are my preference because they are sustainable and there is more potential for cellar aging for with wines under cork,” said Diogo. “And as a Portuguese, I have a deep appreciation for cork oaks and how they are a protected and important part of the entire ecosystem where they grow.”

Alex Sokol Blosser, declares, “I hate screw caps. Sustainability has a been a core value and daily practice for us since we were founded more than 50 years ago,” he said. “Do I wish that every single bottle we make was under cork? I do. But we also need to sustain our family-owned winery with sales, so a few of our wines are under screwcap to meet customer demands.”

Indeed, according to winemakers that I spoke with, the only reason that some wines are under screwcap is linked to sales. “Servers like screwcap bottles for wines sold by-the-glass,” said Diogo. “It’s a double-edged sword, because screwcaps are more expensive now and some wineries have to bring in a mobile bottling line to do screwcaps – so do the sales make up for the added expense? It’s hard to know.”

In the end, natural cork is the clear winner for the world from an environmental standpoint. As de Jesus says, “The pop of the cork always carries good news. It signals that a great moment is about to happen!”

Celebrating Lagers for King Gambrinus Day

Today is King Gambrinus’ birthday – and rather than drink an entire cask of beer, as he so cleverly once did to more easily win a barrel lifting contest, let us celebrate this mythological personification of beer culture by paying homage to those dedicating their lives to ensuring historical and traditional beer styles maintain integrity in this very chaotic adult beverage world.

In the current state of craft beer, one that sees vast innovation in contemporary styles like pastry stouts, smoothie-inspired sour beers, and 90’s style Fruited Malt Beverages making a major comeback as seltzers, it is nice to see a slow but steady increase in production and enjoyment of the far less showy Lager. A revert back, if you will, to the complexity that can result from the use of simple ingredients, traditional recipe writing, and the desire for sustainable nourishment. This concept in beer making dates back as far as 4000 B.C. with Ninkasi, the Sumerian goddess of brewing, both as brewer to the gods and provider for the mortals. The cultural significance of traditional beer making extends through European and African prehistory as specific deities, saints, and mythological characters embody the juxtaposition of beer and brewing to agriculture, harvest, and celebration. 

Resurgence of Lager in American Craft Beer

The past ten years in American craft beer has seen a significant shift in craft Lager production with Lager-only producers like Hanabi in Napa, CA (established 2020), Bierstadt Lagerhaus in Denver, CO (est. 2016), and Goldfinger in Downers Grove, IL (est. 2020) – whose entire catalogs are devoted to exploring variability in the cold-fermented world – and breweries looking to add dimension to their repertoire. Arguably, these old-world styles tend to be a riskier undertaking due to their delicate nature and susceptibility to showing flaws, higher opportunity costs associated with a longer fermentation period, and lack of hype-driven ingredients such as an excessive hop load, lactose, and fruit flavors that so often ensure sales success.

This increase in both accessibility and availability is as much a function of brewer preference as sustained consumer demand amplified by the sheer number of modern breweries. Yes, brewers want to brew lager beer to reclaim tradition, and most want to educate their consumers on this history, while consumers want to drink a more flavorful variation of a less intimidating beer style. Put simply, people want something akin to a macro-produced adjunct Lager from a small and local brewer. This begs the question: how did craft Lager beer find its footing in a beer culture dominated by easily accessible macro Lagers and buzz-worthy hazy IPAs, pastry stouts, and sour beer?

As more and more breweries open their doors to the public and enter into regional and national distribution, retail becomes bogged down with limited shelf space and infinite options. Therefore, a brand that was once someone’s “go to for the style” now has ten new competitive brands. Brand velocity slows down, beer production lessens, and serendipitously more tank space becomes available for slow Lager fermentation.

In addition to time availability, raw material accessibility will influence what a brewer should and should not brew. With today’s excessive use of new world, aroma driven hops for dry-hopping in the creation of less bitter, juicy, tropical fruit forward and dank IPAs, availability can be scarce and cost prohibitive. European-style Lagers offer an alternative for hop-friendly makers and drinkers who prefer a lighter palate, balanced bitterness, and complexity all while showcasing a more readily available, non-haze-beer-friendly, old world noble hop bill. Rather than pineapple and orange Dreamsicle tasting notes, brews showcase a more earthy palate profile dominated by floral and herbal notes that pair beautifully with the often bready and lightly toasted grain character.

Perhaps most acutely connected with the rise in Lager brewing and drinking – and by far the most encouraging to consider – is the yearning for a Eurocentric beer culture and the old-world nostalgia of a drinking paradigm deeply connected to agriculture and harvest, beer as sustenance, seasonal change, and the celebration thereof. We see it in our stateside fall Oktoberfest festivities celebrating the release of Märzen-inspired, amber-hued Lagers and other offerings as crisp as fall leaves on the ground as well as the seasonal shift to spring bock beer as the weather gradually warms. Lenten lager and other nourishing beer styles like Doppelbock and Maibock later in the season has become as apropos to American craft culture as the Oktoberfest beer is come summer’s end.

If you are looking for some great Lager style beers here are some of the best options that we have recently tasted at BevTest, as well as a few Spring seasonal suggestions from some of our friends.

Dovetail Brewery Chicago, IL

From the brewery: “German, Czech, and Belgian styles. Traditional Methods.”

Dovetail has been showcasing authentic brewing tradition in the Ravenswood neighborhood since 2016 when it first opened its doors. In addition to excellent beer, Dovetail offers an exceedingly comfortable, pub-like tasting room, proper glassware, oversized soft pretzels and landjäger to complement, and a brewhouse that houses a copper holding vessel that was once used in the Weihenstephaner teaching and pilot brewery.

Recommended Seasonal Release: Maibock, 6.3% abv

Brewed every year in January so it gets its minimal three-month fermentation hibernation, this bready lady emerges just in time for the annual “Mayfestiversary” in which Dovetail celebrates both the spring thaw and its birthday.

Goldfinger Brewing Downers Grove, IL

From the brewery: “A revived 19th century lager beer tradition. Horizontal tanks, natural carbonation, extended lagering, and decoction brewing”

The founders of Goldfinger have beer deep in their blood as they come from a brewing tradition that dates back to the 19th century in Prague and Poland. No wonder their Grodziskie is so perfectly delicious. As one of two lager-focused breweries to enter the market in 2020, this family-driven producer finds passion in brewing fundamentals and the dependability and simplicity of their thoughtfully produced lager beer.

Recommended Seasonal Release: Zlotonator Dopplebock, 7.66% abv

Doppelbocks were traditionally brewed by German monks for sustenance during times of fasting and this rendition of the style is perfect for such with a fresh baked bread aroma and a rich malt backbone that offers nuances of molasses, raisin, and fig. Complexity increases with each sip as caramelized grain dances with a balancing, earthy hop bitterness and mellow alcohol warmth.

Metropolitan Brewing Chicago, IL

From the brewery: “Brewing German-style lagers in Chicago since 2009”

Metropolitan opened its doors in 2009 as one of the first breweries in Chicago to not only argue the importance of both lagered beer and traditional brewing, but also the need for it in the city. The taproom is large and accommodating and the riverfront patio is perfect for a retreat from the hustle and bustle. This pro-lager culture brewery has even had a hand in producing and reintroducing pre-prohibition stalwart, Conrad Seipp Brewing Company, and has kept this historic brand on retail shelves since 2020.

Recommended Seasonal Release: Dynamo Copper Lager, 5.6% abv

Urban Chestnut Brewing Company Saint Louis, MO

Between a smaller German-inspired taproom and biergarten nestled in amongst the SLU Midtown campus and the much larger production facility and bierhall in the boisterous Grove neighborhood, Urban Chestnut has been inundating Saint Louis beer drinkers with excellent lager beer in Anheuser Busch’s backyard since 2011. In fact, a third location has recently opened in the Hallertau region of Germany near it’s brewmaster’s hometown. No wonder offerings like Zwickel Bavarian lager, Stammtisch German-style pilsner, Dorfbier Munich dunkel, and Freundschaft copper lager are a favorite amongst local imbibers.

Reccomended Seasonal Release: Balkan Germen Helles

Hanabi Brewing Company Napa Valley, CA

For the first time in over 100 years, a craft brewer has the opportunity to put their heads together simultaneously with farmer and maltster, to grow and create something together where decisions can be made throughout the process, literally from planting the seeds in soil, all the way through to serving the beer in the glass.

Recommended Seasonal Beer: 2023 Spring Release

Featuring locally grown grains, malted by Admiral Malting just down the street from the brewery. A true farm to bottle experience every step of the way, and just 9 miles away from where Alice Waters and Chez Panisse began the farm to table movement back in 1971.