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This country’s romance with wine may have begun when
Thomas Jefferson was appointed the Continental Congress’ minister
plenipotentiary in Europe in 1784 and then minister to the Court of Louis
XVI, succeeding Benjamin Franklin. Aside from gaining commercial
concessions from the French and negotiating trade treaties, Jefferson
collected more than 300 European wines that he shipped back to Monticello.
Over the years, wine’s popularity has increased to the
extent that in 1999 consumers in the U.S. drank around 550 million
gallons. While the vast majority of this wine is from the low end of the
market, typically young and cheap, collection and consumption of high-end
vintages is also at an all-time high. Simply put, there are now more
people buying more, and more-expensive, wine. The question for many of
these wine lovers is the same as it was for Thomas Jefferson: how and
where to store this often-valuable liquid?
Ideal Conditions
Jefferson’s solution, of
course, was to design his own cellar, complete with a dumbwaiter that
transported bottles up to the dining room. Not all, however, share
Jefferson’s genius for design, nor do they have the space of a Monticello.
Also, while Jefferson’s cellar provided close to ideal conditions for the
storage of wine, being dark, cool, airy, and still, the typical basement
of a contemporary residence will house hot-water systems, heating systems,
and the like, and will have very little air flow. Likewise, living areas
typically have environments suited more to wine’s destruction than its
preservation. Creating ideal or even adequate conditions under these
circumstances can be difficult and requires a good understanding of the
nature of wine.
The Nature of Wine
Organic and biochemical
compounds give each individual wine its taste, odor, and color. Over the
years these compounds change and new compounds are formed, and this
process constitutes the “aging” of the wine. Wine will also generally have
between 11% and 13% ethyl alcohol. Experts recommend that wine be
protected from three principal elements: light, heat, and air.
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Light tends to age wine prematurely through photochemical
reactions that speed or distort the normal aging processes. For this
reason, colored glass is used for most bottles. Light also usually means
heat, and because heat accelerates virtually every kind of chemical
reaction, it can be a most destructive force on wine.
Any liquid that comes in contact with the atmosphere can
absorb oxygen, nitrogen, carbon dioxide, etc., and dramatically change its
chemical make up. When wine comes in contact with air, generally the
oxygen oxidizes the ethyl alcohol, creating acetic acid, a.k.a. vinegar.
Wine should therefore be protected against air at all costs (aside, of
course, from when it’s being drunk). Thus, bottles are usually stored on
their sides, in order to keep the cork wet and tight in the neck. If the
atmosphere is kept humid, however, the cork will not dry, shrink, or
become more porous. The most commonly suggested level of relative humidity
for wine storage is around 70%.
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Jim Deckebach started Wine Cellar Innovations in
1988 out of his garage. The firm
now occupies a 354,000-sq.ft. building in Cincinnati, stocks over 35
standard designs, and builds around 2,000 cellars a year. Wine Cellar
Innovations offers easily installed kits as well as custom-design
capabilities and a full range of accessories. Their racking is available
in a wide variety of wood species, including redwood, red oak, mahogany,
and other exotics, as well as pine for their economy lines. This custom
cellar shows a good variety of the racking options available from the
firm. Individual bottles are racked against the back wall and in the
elegantly-curved corners, while fan racks are used at the outsides of the
curves and oversized racks store magnums beneath the countertop. Wine
Cellar Innovations is also known for fine decorative detailing,
including murals, tiling, and, as
seen in the panelled door, hand-carvings.
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