Has anyone tried the Saran Wrap(tm) method of removing TCA on a bottle of 1983 Cockburn? There seem to be a lot of people buying a wine that is 75% (83%?) likely to be corked. It seems like some experimentation is in order.
(Reminding you all that Saran is a completely different plastic than most food wraps are made from.)
Googling on [ corked saran ] gets 6.5 million hits. Most of the first 50 (that apply to this) say it works; the ones that don't often say they used some generic food wrap.
You would miss the first 24 hours of change in the wine, but you might gas the bottle to slow any changes, before recorking to let the Saran do its magic.
The question is: does corking (and removing the TCA taint) also damage the wine in some other ways?
Unlike most descriptions, I made a thing like a long needle with a 5/16 inch eye out of 1/16" stainless steel wire. I fanfold or accordion-pleat 24 inches of Saran, rather than roll it, to get the most surface exposed (without having to agitate the bottle). Pulling the pleated Saran through the eye and jamming the other end into a clean cork lets me retrieve the Saran with little trouble after 24 hours.
You can get good stainless steel wire from the nearest welding supply shop. Ask for #316 alloy TIG filler rod. They usually stock 1/16, 3/32 and 1/8 inch diameter. This is a really handy material for bending up almost anything that you don't want to get rusty or contaminate food (or wine). Generally comes in 3 foot lengths. Sold by the pound. 1/8 is hard to bend; you need strong pliers (it will wreck your good needle-nose pliers) and strong wrists, or some kind of bending jig.
