The winery’s 2009 Cabernet Sauvignon was
aged for two years under water, California winemaker Gustavo Gonzalez, of Napa
Valley winery Mira, is overseeing the project in which barrel-fermented
Cabernet Sauvignon was bottled and then dropped in secure crates into the
Atlantic Ocean, off the coast of South Carolina, US.
At an event hosted by the winemaker two weeks ago, around
24 guests at The Palm in Orlando, Florida, sampled the wine.
Gonzalez said the results of the experiment were both pleasing and
fascinating.
“The first wine we brought up was analysed against the same vintage aged
on land,” he told The Miami Herald. “Chemically they were identical but
there was a distinct difference in the wines’ taste and aroma. The submerged
wine had aged nicely with well structured tannins.”
You can read more at http://www.thedrinksbusiness.com/2014/11/underwater-wine-ageing-deemed-a-success/
The real difference is that the wine was put into the bottle after barrel aging on the land then submerged. Walker Romantica put the barrel into a protective package and then submerged it. The true aging and the reactions of the alcohol and the barrel are what is truly happening with the "Seven Fathom" process. I think that the wine makes would find better results if the barrel itself is submerged instead of bottled wines. ;o)
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