TechnologyUndersea-Aged Champagne Is Starting to Surface

Undersea-Aged Champagne Is Starting to Surface


If you’ve ever been hit by a flying champagne cork, you will be painfully aware of the pressure in a bottle of fizz. And that pressure inside—and outside—the bottle has caught the imaginations of champagne innovators.

“We conduct many trials every year to fine-tune the pressure to the vintage,” says Louis Roederer’s chef de cave, Jean Baptiste Lécaillon. “We have a lower pressure—so smaller bubbles—[because] we want a seamless and soft mousse.”

The pressure inside a bottle of champagne is typically around 6 bar, or three times the pressure of a car tire. But Louis Roederer champagnes can range from 6 to 4.5 bar. “The more acidity you have in the wine, the more aggressive the feeling of the bubbles … This is also why we are on the low side,” explains Lécaillon, “especially on Cristal, which is often non-malo [referring to malolactic fermentation] and low pH.” The newly released Cristal 2015, he says, “is a great example of this featherlight mousse … It is at the same time delicious, effortlessly intense, and delicate.”

One only needs a basic grasp of physics to realize that storing champagne at higher temperatures will increase the pressure inside. But scientists were astonished to find that when a bottle stored at 20 degrees Celsius (well above cellar temperature) was uncorked, the velocity of gas expelled from the bottleneck momentarily reached almost Mach 2—twice the speed of sound.

The Ballistics of Bubbly

Researcher Gérard Liger-Belair, professor of chemical physics at the University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne, likens this phenomenon “to what happens with rocket plume exhausts.” The pressure causes the CO2 to freeze and turn to dry ice when suddenly released, creating a plume at the bottle opening.

Liger-Belair is a specialist in champagne and effervescence, and the author of Uncorked: The Science of Champagne. But he hopes the findings, published in an academic journal last year, will also have applications in the fields of ballistics and rocketry.

The pressure in a champagne bottle falls over the years, resulting in smaller and scarcer bubbles—and that more composed, rather quieter character can often be part of the charm of a long-aged cuvée.

In the name of research, Dom Pérignon’s cellar master Vincent Chaperon once tried to reinvigorate the bubbles in a bottle of Dom Pérignon Plénitude 2, which is aged on the lees for 15 to 20 years, or around twice as long as a flagship DP. He won’t say how he did it (SodaStream? Aarke?), but he admits the result was “unharmonious—not good.”



Original Source Link

Latest News

Former Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer was Google’s first female engineer—only because she tried to delete a recruiter email and accidentally opened it instead

Mayer's career can be boiled down to a single wrong keystroke. Read More Original Source Link

Bitcoin price dips 4% as TradingView 'glitch' sends dominance to zero

BTC price stability wobbles in what appears to be a knee-jerk response to erroneous Bitcoin dominance data. Original Source...

China’s EV sales zoom past western rivals

This article is an on-site version of our FirstFT newsletter. Subscribers can sign up to our Asia, Europe/Africa...

Squid Game season 2 review: a brutal remix of Netflix’s biggest show

In the three years since Squid Game became Netflix’s biggest property, it’s been easy to forget just why...

Brickbat: For the Birds

Los Angeles County Sheriff's Deputy Joseph Benza III faces up to 10 years in prison after pleading guilty...

The fabric of the universe is ‘lopsided’, huge gravitational wave mapping study finds

Using the largest gravitational wave detector ever made, we have confirmed earlier reports that the fabric of the...

Must Read

Homeowners outnumber renters everywhere in Buffalo Niagara except …

If you live in Erie or Niagara counties,...

Barclays-backed Copper withdraws UK crypto license application

The UK FCA previously said that almost 90%...
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you