All About Wine And Its Goodness!

Best Kept Secrets of Wine and Its Goodness

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Posts Tagged ‘glassware’

How To Give Your A Little Something Extra

The type of glass you use to drink wine can make a real difference; large wine glasses can really make a cheap bottle of wine taste like an expensive bottle. There are other tips to help improve the taste however it is key to get the glass right before you start doing anything else.

A glass that will enhance flavour should be large and round with a wide rim. This helps add a psychological factor when people taste the wine making them think it is something special and adds the extra wow factor. This type of glass does have many benefits; it helps the smell of the wine to be released as well as aiding the flavour by the taste bursting in the mouth as soon as the wine is drunk.

The tips I would advice to get the most out of your wine is to make sure you decant it, warm the wine glass you use and eat salty snacks before you drink.

Doing such a simple thing as using decanters can make a serious difference to the taste. You should decant a bottle of wine for few hours before serving and definitely do not refrigerate, the wine should be room temperature.

Making sure your wine glasses are warm is often forgot about. It is important to have the glass the same temperature as your wine room temperature. If your glassware is cold you can warm it up by running it under a warm tap for a minute.

You may not think it but salty snacks can make a difference to the flavour of your wine. If you’re having a dinner party and serving wine with your food then salty snacks are perfect for a pre meal food and also preparing your taste buds for the wine.

These tips do make a difference and are definitely worth giving a go and making standard practice when serving wine.

Choosing the Right Glassware for Wine

Choosing and using the right glassware is an integral part of the wine drinking experience. t’s true that you can get wine in cans or cardboard cartons and perhaps there may come a time when we drink wine through straws.  Hopefully that day is a very long way off, because that would ruin many excellent wines and put the corkscrew manufacturers out of business!

Good glassware (not necessarily expensive glasses)   is central to the enjoyment of a good wine.In fact, very expensive glassware is often not a sensible choice as the designs tend to have long stems and a high centre of gravity.A glass filled with wine is inherently unstable and there can’t be anyone who hasn’t tipped over the occasional glass during a conversation or meal.  Wine glasses will break and there’s nothing you can do except to buy glasses that are fairly sturdy and reasonably priced.

A good wine glass is basically quite simple – essentially it should really be made of glass. It should be perfectly clear with no tints or opaque colours because apart from just holding the wine, decent glassware should also display it. The true deep colour of a wine can be a beautiful sight in a clear, clean glass just as a range of bottles can be impressive in a well constructed wine rack.A decent glass should also enhance, or at the very least preserve, the wine’s bouquet. Good wine glasses, no matter what price, are narrower at the top than at the bottom to concentrate the aromas of the wine. Experienced wine drinkers swirl the wine in the glass before taking the first sip to release more of its bouquet.

So if you plan to buy wine-related gifts this Christmas, any decent collection of wine glasses will do the trick. The only truly unacceptable wine glass is the saucer-like champagne glass – which is guaranteed to warm the wine and make it flat in record time. they are only useful for a shrimp cocktail starter, but otherwise for champagne and sparkling wines use a flute.

What's The Best Way to Store Wine at Home?

Fine wine is expensive and relatively fragile but ages superbly in the sort of conditions found in underground cellars.  Most wine storage systems attempt to replicate this environment as closely as possible for a really healthy wine.  There are a number of companies who will cellar wine for you, but if your wine is intended for consumption, off-site storage has its drawbacks. You can’t just pop in and retrieve the bottles you want when you want and there are charges each time you put wine in or take it out—costs which soon mount up.

As a result, where space affords, most wine lovers find it more convenient to keep their wine at home and the bottle opener handy. Wine should be kept at a cool constant temperature in the dark, so for those of us lucky enough to have proper cellars, storing your wine in a wine rack will provide close to the ideal conditions.  That’s especially true with cork-sealed bottles which are best stored horizontally rather than upright.  Humidity is also important because it helps keep the cork in good condition. In a properly humid cellar a sound cork can comfortably last for around 70 years.

For most of us urban dwellers, though, where living space is at a premium, a cellar is not available.  In that case a wine cooler or wine cabinet is the most versatile and affordable way of storing wine at home. Temperature-controlled storage conditions of some kind are a necessity as the vast majority of homes in the UK are not air conditioned, and ambient temperatures can reach as much as 30° C during the summer months. Wine coolers come in several different shapes, sizes and finishes, and range in price from relatively cheap to the enormously expensive.Some are little more than adapted refrigerators, while the top of the range models are quality pieces of furniture designed with wine storage in mind.