Posted on 05/05/2021 9:51:55 AM PDT by Red Badger
Twelve bottles of Bordeaux wine spent 438 days aging at the International Space Station. (Image credit: Mission WISE) Red wine stored at the International Space Station for more than a year tasted a bit different than its terrestrial counterparts and, surprisingly, aged faster, too, a new study finds.
Researchers shipped 12 bottles of Bordeaux wine to the space station on a Northrop Grumman Cygnus cargo spacecraft in November 2019 — not to go with the astronauts' meals, but to study how microgravity, or weightlessness, affects wine as it ages. The wine remained in a sealed canister at the orbiting laboratory for 438 days and 19 hours before returning to Earth on a SpaceX Dragon cargo spacecraft in January.
Compared to a bottle of the same wine that aged for the same amount of time on Earth, the wine that aged at the International Space Station "was really maybe one to two or even three years further evolved than you would expect from the one that had remained on Earth," wine writer Jane Anson, who participated in the taste test, told reporters in a press conference earlier this year.
Anson was one of 12 panelists who participated in the taste test after the wine returned from space. Of those panelists, five (including Anson) were professional wine tasters. For the first part of the test, panelists were given three glasses of wine, not knowing which glasses contained the wine from space.
"At that point we're looking for aromatics and visuals, if we could see a difference," Anson said in the May 24 briefing. "We basically had to pick which of the three was different. And of those, I saw a difference in the evolution of the color of the wine in one of them. I didn't know which."
For the second part of the test, the panelists "did a straight comparative tasting of the two wines — both fantastic — and one of the main things to look at initially was, have these wines survived? Are they both good quality? And the answer to that would definitely be, yes," Anson said.
For the taste test, participants were given three glasses of wine each, not knowing which had aged in space and which had remained on Earth. (Image credit: Mission WISE) "Unanimously, the two wines were considered to be great wines, which means that despite the 14-month stay on the International Space Station, the 'space wine' was very well evaluated sensorially," Philippe Darriet, a researcher with the University of Bordeaux who organized the taste test, said in a statement.
"Differences were perceived concerning the color of the wines. Concerning aroma and taste components: the two wines were described with a rich vocabulary attesting to remarkable olfactory and gustatory complexity; sensory dimensions of sweetness, harmony and persistence were particularly noted," Darriet added.
The researchers plan to publish the results of the study in a scientific journal and only revealed a preliminary analysis of the taste and other sensory tests in the news conference.
The space wine was the first of six experiments that French startup Space Cargo Unlimited plans to fly for a research project called Mission WISE, which stands for "Vitis Vinum in Spatium Experimentia" (Latin for "grape wine in the distance experiment").
The second mission, called "Alpha," launched on Blue Origin's New Shepard in December 2019, to study the effect of microgravity on vine calluses (or grapevine shoots) on a short-duration mission. Then in March 2020, Mission Wise launched the "Canes" experiment with 320 vine plants to the space station on SpaceX's Dragon CRS-20 cargo mission, for a six-month stay at the orbiting lab. The next three experiments, scheduled to launch by the end of 2022, will focus on bacteria, yeast and fermentation processes.
"The journey we started six years ago to really leverage the space environments for the future of agriculture and viticulture," Nicolas Gaume, co-founder of Space Cargo Unlimited, said in the news conference. "Mission Wise is the first privately led comprehensive research program, aiming to find a solution for the future of agriculture thanks to space."
Gaume and his colleagues hope that studying wine and other foods in space could not only be useful for future crewed space missions, but it could also help prepare the world for the effects that climate change will have on agriculture, such as grapes.
"On the International Space Station, where we conduct our experiments, the Earth's environment is recreated as all. We have the same level of temperature, the same level of pressure, humidity, the same level of oxygen levels, everything but one parameter: gravity. And it matters," Gaume said. "When we remove that key component of life, everything living that is inside the International Space Station is really exposed to an immense stress, stress that is triggering evolutions and changes that we want to capture with Mission Wise to forge options for the future of our agriculture and of viticulture."
Darriet added in the news conference that he expects this work "could enlighten us on the evolution of sensory perception, or the pleasure of the sensory perception — which is very important, evidently — associated with also kinds of foods which could be preserved under conditions of weightlessness. And so, we are confident that this study should be able to give information, not on wine necessarily ... but also on other kinds of food products in the context of special missions."
Email Hanneke Weitering at hweitering@space.com or follow her on Twitter @hannekescience. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.
The Fireballs: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FZynyHW2hfw
Yes, but the next questions is, Did Alice take some wine with her when she got sent to the moon?
Nice! The band Buddy Holly never knew he had. Just about as good as Bill Haley and his Comets.
Regardless of where you are in the universe, the time is always now.
Lol
Years ago, at la Tour d'Argent in Paris, I had some 1882 Louis Salignac cognac. It was like cream! Just think, soon they can crank it out overnight.
They can do that on Earth........................hehehe
Dumb! The wine’s “age” will never change! It was made, kept in a barrel, then bottled! If Earth’s gravity and zero gravity effect the processes of its acidic breakdown differently then say so!
No idea, but that bottle of Petrus is at least a couple thousand bucks. Going by that, my guess would be the taxpayers.
ping
Y’right! Maybe the technology is closer than I realised!
Hmmm Robert Heinlein thought that low gravity slowed down ageing this study seems to show otherwise.🤔
So did Asimov and Clark....................
Assh***s. They sent wine to the space station and then brought it back. Nothing for the astronauts. Wine is a huge waste of resources that could be devoted to growing beef instead of the stupid progressives trying to take away our beef.
The ‘elites’ will go into space.............
Elysium (movie starring Jodie Foster and Matt Damon, August 2013)
In the year 2159, two classes of people exist: the very wealthy who live on a pristine man-made space station called Elysium, and the rest, who live on an overpopulated, ruined Earth. Secretary Rhodes (Jodie Foster), a hard line government official, will stop at nothing to enforce anti-immigration laws and preserve the luxurious lifestyle of the citizens of Elysium. That doesn’t stop the people of Earth from trying to get in, by any means they can. When unlucky Max (Matt Damon) is backed into a corner, he agrees to take on a daunting mission that, if successful, will not only save his life, but could bring equality to these polarized worlds.
Anson was one of 12 panelists who participated in the taste test after the weed returned from space. Of those panelists, five (including Anson) were professional weed tasters. For the first part of the test, panelists were given three dubes of weed, not knowing which joints contained the weed from space.
“At that point we’re looking for aromatics and visuals, if we could see a difference,” Anson said in the May 24 briefing. “We basically had to pick which of the three was different. And of those, I saw a difference in the evolution of the color of the weed in one of them. I didn’t know which.”
For the second part of the test, the panelists “did a straight comparative tasting of the two weeds — both fantastic — and one of the main things to look at initially was, have these wines survived? Are they both good quality? And the answer to that would definitely be, Wowee man,” Anson said.
Oddly enough half of the weed we sent to space seems to
have gone amiss somewhere in the station...
The astronauts seemed to find that funny.
Would have been a lot more interesting if instead they answered the ages-old question: Does my dick look bigger in Space?
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