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Wine Glass

admin 2022-07-18 17:45:0203 Comments
Once upon a time, you were new to the wine world. Your expectations and standards are low, you drink from whatever novelty cup your roommate manages to wash, and enjoy your participation in this coming-of-age ceremony, whether you buy it from the sales rack of your local liquor store or (horror!) Flow out of a box. Now, of course, you're much more complicated. You know your favorite grape variety and descriptor, not "dry". But did you know that the glass you choose to drink from can have a big impact on your enjoyment of wine,glass cookware?

“The experience of drinking wine by the glass is always better,” says Patricia Hui of Lalique Luxury Crystals. "It's a shape that hasn't changed in hundreds of years. The U shape helps the wine 'breathe' and keeps the temperature more consistent because your hands can change the temperature of the wine." Also, drinking from proper glassware also There's a psychological factor: "We see drinking as a luxury moment of the day. Wine is for enjoyment. It's for taking time for yourself or for a meal with someone. You're planning a moment and it pays to use something better quality. ."

Now that we're all using the right glasses, it's important to understand the difference between glasses designed for red and glasses designed for white. “Red wines have to breathe more because the flavors tend to be heavier and more complex,” says Hui. "Ideally, you'd pour in the red wine and wait five to ten minutes to finish it. You'd see people swirl it in a decanter or glass, which helps to open up the flavors. The demand for this in white wines Less. A smaller glass gives it less room to inflate and you can enjoy it straight out of the bottle.” Some wines require a more nuanced approach: “You drink champagne with a flute because the shape helps preserve the bubbles and blistering," Hui said. "For Bordeaux or Burgundy - a heavy, complex wine that is quite dry in nature - a large glass ensures it has room to breathe and open."

If you're a devoted drinker of a particular variety and have plenty of cabinet space, it's worth investing in a dedicated Chardonnay or Pinot Noir glass. But if you're an everyday (and indecisive) wine drinker just looking to elevate the experience, go for a good regular wine glass. Lalique offers a one-size-fits-all solution with the new Universal glass in the 100-point range. Designed by wine critic James Suckling, who tastes up to 50,000 wines a year, this wine glass was designed to help Suckling integrate his travel equipment into a wine glass that fits any type of wine. Suckling's goal is to create a tool that allows him to learn about wine without any constant elements - and yours is to create a moment of everyday luxury that rocks with whatever you pour. While Universal glass costs as much as $140 a piece, Hui insists it's an investment that pays off on a cost-per-use basis. "It's a luxury you splurge on once, and you can theoretically use it with every meal," she said. If you entertain regularly, these glasses can also bring social capital: "Having a better set of glasses shows you have some knowledge of wine and how to drink it," she says. "You immediately think this person knows what they're talking about. It shows a certain skill."

Even if the benefits of drinking wine by a fancy glass are purely spiritual, Xu urges budding wine lovers not to ignore it lightly. "It changed the experience," she explained. "Just as you walk into a restaurant and experience the ambience, the value of elements built for form rather than function: the shape of the glass to fit your hand, the way it supports the wine, the specific stem and design and the crystal." Wine can be intimidating, she points out, but the only way to learn more about it is to drink more, because at the end of the day, it's for enjoyment.

 

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