

Cork taint is a broad term referring to a wine fault characterized by a set of undesirable smells or tastes found in a bottle of wine, especially spoilage that can only be detected after bottling, aging and opening. Though modern studies have shown that other factors can also be responsible for taint – including wooden barrels, storage conditions and the transport of corks and wine – the cork is normally considered to be responsible, and a wine found to be tainted on opening is said to be "corked". Cork taint can affect wines irrespective of price and quality level.
The chief cause of cork taint is the presence of 2,4,6-trichloroanisole (TCA) in the wine. Corked wine containing TCA has a characteristic odor, variously described as resembling a moldy newspaper, wet dog, damp cloth, or damp basement. In almost all cases of corked wine the wine's native aromas are reduced significantly, and a very tainted wine is completely undrinkable (though harmless). While the human threshold for detecting TCA is measured in the single-digit parts per trillion, this can vary by several orders of magnitude depending on an individual's sensitivity. Detection is also complicated by the olfactory system's particularly quick habituation to TCA, making the smell less obvious on each subsequent sniff.
mhill95149 wrote:Found some answers in a NYT story from 2008
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/05/dining/05curious.html
Using TCA tainted wine is not the reason....
Jazzfood wrote:A Sicilian friend of mine showed me that trick 20 yrs ago after having the best pulpo I'd ever had @ his house. Said his mother used to do it to tenderize it. That was good enough for me, been doing it ever since. Another trick was to never let it boil rapidly. A slight simmer or "kiss" (like w/demi glace) is the proper way to poach it in a court bullion.
Johnsoncon wrote:Not a big fan of the Wit, too faddish or "Vegas-ish" for my taste.
David Hammond wrote:Johnsoncon wrote:Not a big fan of the Wit, too faddish or "Vegas-ish" for my taste.
The flash will certainly not appeal to some; somewhat ironically (and if memory serves) the place was designed by a former philosophy major from the University of Chicago, a place more Hogwart's than Harrah's.
berryberry wrote:Has anyone else been here recently? I'm thinking about going this weekend.
chezbrad wrote:A late August meal here yielded one of the most banal and bland dining experiences I've yet had in Chicago.
iblock9 wrote:chezbrad wrote:A late August meal here yielded one of the most banal and bland dining experiences I've yet had in Chicago.
Similiar recent experience here for me. Didn't find anything redeming about the restaurant. Dishes were conceptually uninteresting and poorly executed. You are better off most anywhere else.
chezbrad wrote:I can't speak for iblock, but I found CM emblematic of contemporary Italian cooking in Chicago: too timid, too restrained; when there was flavor, it was predominantly salt. Which is not to say that the food wasn't edible, but I couldn't believe how poor the flavor-price ratio was: we paid nearly $100 for a crudo, the octopus, a burrata salad, the carbonera, and some rapini and not a single dish "popped." Given the goals of the chef, given the cost per person, I found this to be the most disappointing meal I've eaten this year.
David, if you've been back since your initial report, I'd be curious to hear about your experiences.
David Hammond wrote:iblock9 wrote:chezbrad wrote:A late August meal here yielded one of the most banal and bland dining experiences I've yet had in Chicago.
Similiar recent experience here for me. Didn't find anything redeming about the restaurant. Dishes were conceptually uninteresting and poorly executed. You are better off most anywhere else.
Wow, that's damning. If it's not too painful, I'd be interested in hearing what you had that convinced you Cibo Matto would be worse than anywhere else in Chicago.



nsxtasy wrote:I think it's a great place to go for a special dinner where you want to impress people with great food and great surroundings, and without having some of the downsides of other trendy places (e.g. it's not overly noisy and you have a nice sense of spaciousness and privacy).
happy_stomach wrote:nsxtasy wrote:I think it's a great place to go for a special dinner where you want to impress people with great food and great surroundings, and without having some of the downsides of other trendy places (e.g. it's not overly noisy and you have a nice sense of spaciousness and privacy).
This is a stupid question, but I was walking up State Street on Sunday after the Chicago Half Marathon and heard a lot of cheering and yelling. It sounded much like the race I had just finished except that I was far from the Hyde Park finish line. I realized that the noise was coming from the Wit, specifically from the crowds cheering on the people climbing the building's façade. Does anyone know if this wall-climbing noise is audible inside, specifically within Cibo Matto? Also, are the climbers visible from the restaurant windows? Or maybe the wall-climbing ends before dinner time? I think this is a regular activity now. I have plans to dine at Cibo Matto, and being a parkour practitioner, I'm all for scaling buildings (sans harnesses though), but I don't want to eat there if I'll be able to hear yelling or see people literally hanging outside.
jesteinf wrote:I will say that the scene outside the Wit was incredibly annoying on the Saturday night that we ate there. It was like an amped up version of Rush St. It might have had something to do with a concert that was just getting out at the Chicago Theater, but yikes.
That I'll being said, I really enjoyed my meal there.
Hasn't the chef recently left though?
happy_stomach wrote:nsxtasy wrote:I think it's a great place to go for a special dinner where you want to impress people with great food and great surroundings, and without having some of the downsides of other trendy places (e.g. it's not overly noisy and you have a nice sense of spaciousness and privacy).
This is a stupid question, but I was walking up State Street on Sunday after the Chicago Half Marathon and heard a lot of cheering and yelling. It sounded much like the race I had just finished except that I was far from the Hyde Park finish line. I realized that the noise was coming from the Wit, specifically from the crowds cheering on the people climbing the building's façade. Does anyone know if this wall-climbing noise is audible inside, specifically within Cibo Matto? Also, are the climbers visible from the restaurant windows? Or maybe the wall-climbing ends before dinner time? I think this is a regular activity now. I have plans to dine at Cibo Matto, and being a parkour practitioner, I'm all for scaling buildings (sans harnesses though), but I don't want to eat there if I'll be able to hear yelling or see people literally hanging outside.
The GP wrote:happy_stomach-
The Respiratory Health Assocation of Metropolitan Chicago held the Skyline Plunge at the Wit on Sunday as a fundraiser. Participants raised money to have the opportunity to rappel down the hotel. That's what you witnessed. I can't imagine the Wit does this regularly. It seems rather disruptive for its guests.
-Mary