From what I have read before, your experience is more to do with
bottle-shock than sudden maturation. Most people seem to agree that
wine gets uppity on bottling and doesn't become ammenable once more
until it has a chance to stretch its legs and pace around the bottle
until it feels at home. Arguments rage as to why this is so. Usually
a 2 month quarantine is recommended (if I remember rightly). It could
be that yours improved markedly in the 1 week you waited.
Others will no doubt fill you in as to why bottle maturation works.
They'll use much better words than I know :)
Thanks for the reply.The wine I described had been in a glass demijohn
(tightly stoppered with a rubber bung) for three years,and I would
have expected it to taste rather good by now.However on immediately
pouring out a glass directly from the demijohn,the taste was dull and
very disappointing after so much maturation in an inert 5litre
vessel.The change after about a week in a corked bottle was nothing
less than remarkable.Conventional wisdom suggests,as you do,that on
bottling the taste should get worse for a while due to bottle shock.In
my case the complete reverse has happened.
Michael
Perhaps you introduced a bit of oxygen when you bottled?
Steve
On Nov 21, 8:08 am, michael <michael.ibbot...@yahoo.co.uk> wrote: