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A rich Chardonnay may improve with air, but fresh Sauvignon Blanc may lose snap. Why?

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Answer: Air trades freshness for openness

Air trades freshness for opennessCorrect. Air can reveal heavier, slower-building notes in a rich white, especially if it has oak, lees, or a little sulfur edge. But a fresh Sauvignon Blanc often lives on bright, volatile citrus and green aromas, so long breathing can spend the exact snap you wanted. The rule is not red versus white; it is whether oxygen reveals structure or uses up freshness.

White wine cannot oxidizeNo. White wine can oxidize; in fact, many delicate whites are more easily dulled by too much oxygen than sturdy young reds. The useful distinction is style, not color. Some whites have hidden texture or sulfur notes that air can improve, while fresh aromatic whites may already be at their peak when poured.

Cold blocks every aromaNot quite. Cold slows aroma release and can hide some smell, but it does not seal every aroma molecule inside the glass. Temperature and oxygen are separate levers: warming may make a wine smell louder, while breathing changes which aromas survive. A cold fresh white can still lose its crisp edge if left too long.

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