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Champaign Corks
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.To answer your question, the bulbous corks we remove to enjoy Champagne are forced in by a corking machine; prior to machines they were hammered in by mallets.
Making Champagne is basically a two stage process. The first is to make a still white wine, then the wine is bottled and into the bottle goes some yeast to induce a second fermentation in the bottle. The bottle is closed with a crown cap - the same as used on beer bottles. (Nerd note - see the rounded rim of a Champagne bottle - thats what the crown cap goes on.)
Fermenation results in carbon dioxide gas, and because the gas cannot excape it remains in the wine - thats the cause of the future bubbles. It also results in dead yeast. The bottle is slowly inverted so the yeast slides down onto the cap, the neck frozen, the beer cap removed together with an ice plug containing the dead yeast, a small amount of wine is added to replace that which was lost, this is sweetened according to the various types of Champagne, and the new 'proper' cork inserted and held on by a wire cage.
That, very briefly, is the process. There's lots more that can be said.
Don't misunderatand me...I'm quite happy to learn here, but I'm no scientist and I just do not comprehend your points. That, plus the fact that I based my original answer largely on the website I offered the link to as well as others...not just off the top of my head.
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