timesonline.co.uk — Hiroshi Tanaka has developed an electrolysis device that simulates, he claims, the effect of ageing in wines. In 15 seconds it can transform the youngest plonks into fine old draughts as fruit flavours are enhanced and rough edges are mellowed
Oct 11, 2005 View in Crawl 4
elevenOct 12, 2005
I'm always up for better tasting wine... especially if it also reduces the hang-over ;-)
tibeOct 12, 2005
nate263: <a class="user" href="http://digg.com/digg_news/digg_promotion_algorithm_updated">http://digg.com/digg_news/digg_promotion_algorithm_updated</a>
kidviciousOct 12, 2005
Wasn't this on the Screen Savers a long time ago?
tarunOct 12, 2005
Cool article.Please use spell check. Ageing should be aging
aznbondOct 12, 2005
This is pretty interesting, I hope it works well. Especially seeing as how some wine chemistry is pretty complex... and electrochem (I cringe at the thought of it).But the ability to buy something like an '02 Cab... and age it to varying degrees.. and be able to try it all in one night. That would be mind blowing.And think about the savings... buying good wine isn't too cheap for a student.
pdaphreakOct 12, 2005
As was stated, there's no 'e' in aging. There's also no 'a' in tomorrow, no 'a' in definitely, and no 'e' in taking.i feer 4 tha next genurashun
cheeseisgoodOct 12, 2005
Seems like everyone is trying to find a way to make great wine more affordable. Another product on the market ($50) which claims to improve a wine's taste by reducing the size of the tannins with a magnetic collar is <a class="user" href="http://www.thewineclip.com.">http://www.thewineclip.com.</a>
dvidguy08Mar 8, 2009
Just do it yourself...<a class="user" href="http://www.growinggrapesandwinemaking.com/" rel="nofollow">http://www.growinggrapesandwinemaking.com/</a>