I let my wine breathe as it is poured from a bottle into a wine glass, given a little swirl and a smell...... and voila, 5 seconds later it is ready to drink. Seriously though........A wine that is a little rough around the edges will usually settle down and open up upon consuming the second pour of a bottle. Thank you for your honest assessment of the pro's and cons of decanting and caraffing of wine. Very informative.
Great Channel, I'm impressed how you are always willing to be honest and take a blind challenge regardless if you guess right or wrong. That shows true unbiased results at the expense of always being right, which really doesn't matter, because we all know you ARE The Master of Wine! Thank you for your videos, very fun and educational.
Thanks a lot for another great wine lesson! I always caraffe the wine before drinking, when I'm quite sure that the wine is not in it's drinking window yet - exactly as you mentioned. For example, did it yesterday with a beautiful Madiran wine from 2015. This tannat wine is somewhat rustic and grippy, though the carrafing for about an hour and a half rounded its edges and the wine has just greatly complented the beef wellington we had at lunch. At the wine store I work at, we use a pouring device which is connected to argon, so that after each pour for a customer the bottle is filled with argon to prevent oxidation. The only disadvantage of this is that most customers fill some sort of reduction at first smell, but it's great when after giving a wine to breath for just couple of minutes everyone gets an evidence for a difference between just poured and caraffed wine.
Hi Konstantin, here a few video ideas: 1. How to pick the right wine in the supermarket/online/etc 2. How to pair wine and food 3. How to become a wine expert (know more about wines...) 4. How to properly serve wines 5. wine knigge ....
Nice video. I don’t decant because I pour directly from the barrel :). When I have a bottle of wine I usually decant wine, mostly the red one. I think most wines will benefit or at least won’t loose from decanting.
I've been drinking wine at least semi-"seriously" for over 50 years now. The only thing I _really_ know is how little I understand wine. I just discovered your channel today and have already learned several new things. Gotta love it, right?
I carafe most of the times when corking up a bottle of red wine. I pour it into the wide carafe, let it sit for 15 min, then put the carafe in the fridge for 15 min. In my experience the wine opens up very well almost everytime, as I sometimes try a small glass before carafing and I notice a difference before and after. This is especially the case for cheaper wines, you kind of remove the rough edge from them by getting rid of the residual CO2 that otherwise gives it a bitter finish, as well as polymerize the tannins into something smoother. 30 minutes in total to me is enough time for it to open up and take off that roughness, but you still don't miss out on any part of the journey as the wine evolves in the glass. For a finer white wine I just pour a small glass to glugg in some air into the wine in the bottle and put it back into the fridge for 30 minutes before serving. I especially do this with Chablis as I've noticed they need some air to really show that "fruit forwardness". Anyway, this is just what works for me. You can absolutely give it more time in the glass instead.
That's pretty similar to what I do (at least for the last few bottles we had). I always noticed that the unpleasant smells were gone and the taste of fruit was more present.
I quite like caraffing wines the day before serving, and then pour them back into the bottle with a funnel. Put the cork back in and let it mature with the "fresh" oxygen over night. Seems to make the biggest difference for me.
@@seminky5341 shouldn't go stale over night, especially not in the fridge, no. But I also only do it for big and bold red wines, with enough tannin and body to take it.. try it :)
Thank you for keeping the blending scene short…lol. And love to see that wines are not too sensitive about breathing and temperature (from previous video). Unless for sediment, I like my wine to breathe and grow in the glass (usually the second glass- the first one disappears pretty quickly..)
Hi Konstantin, love your videos and find them inspirational!! Studying right now for my sommelier level 1 exam and search for inspiration in all the sources
Very helpful video. At a friends place the other day and spotted a 1978 Fairmont Cab Sav. , Napa Valley hidden in his rack. I told him the cork was going off😁so we had to pop it. Bloody beautiful
Loved this video and your content just keeps getting better! On a side note; I have never seen any evidence online that people could taste the difference after caraffing a wine vs not. I have looked for articles and on UA-cam and have never seen proof of a blind tasting where anybody got it right consistently. I fear that wine ‘growing in the glass’ may be a myth, which is odd because I definitely feel like I notice the difference. Could it be that reaction with oxygen does not play the role we think? It seems increasingly likely to me that a complex wine improves in flavor ‘in the glass’ because you just keep noticing new flavors as you get desensitized to the more dominant flavors. This would be a function of our biology rather than the breathing of the wine. Just a thought. If you have any resources on this subject please let me know! I am very eager to learn.
You raise many good points. One factor that has confounded me personally is the change in temperature - sometimes the wine seems to open up because it's getting a bit warmer, and that lets some of its aromas shine better. Oxygen plays no role there. Also, I've experienced the opposite, especially on the palate, when a wine becomes duller as it gets warmer. It'd be complicated to determine accurately the effects of air in isolation, especially for whites (maybe we'd need to sit outside on a winter day? 😬).
I'll just posit you this; if exposure to air had no impact on a wine, then there should be no difference from the minute I popped the cork on a bottle to after that same bottle sat on my kitchen counter for a week. Obviously exposure to air impacts wine, both for good and bad. In my experience (not a wine master, not a sommelier, just 15 years selling wine) almost all wines benefit from some exposure to air. Some get a good result with 30 minutes, but most are 90 minutes to 120 minutes. Big Italian reds and Bordeaux are often better 24 to 48 hours after opening. I even had a central coast zin that sat on my kitchen table for a week after pouring half the bottle the first day showing and I thought it was going to be vinegar. I poured myself a glass just to see; and it was absolutely marvelous. It was like a perfectly baked blueberry pie; a bit of flaky toasted top crust, followed by pure baked blueberry (not that overly sweet canned pie filling taste - just pure warm blueberries) with a hint of spice (nutmeg, cinnamon), just absolutely stellar. It was not the best wine I've ever had, but it still stands as the best zin I've ever tasted. Time and exposure to air definitely have an impact on taste.
Just recently I realized how much it can help when I had several bottles of wine that really improved after dacanting. Often, especially younger wines can have some unpleasant smells to it that vanished after a short time in the decanter. But I did make the same experience with a bit older wines (here vintages 2011-2013) that noticeably gained after decanting. My conclusion is: decanting will seldomly harm the wine but mostly will help the wine to open up.
Yes for older clarets, Rhones etc. Yes for younger wines that need a bit of air time. No for Burgundy, Beaujolais or wines designed to be drunk young. I double decanted a 2014 Barolo last night and it definitely improved it. Will check soon on the other half of the bottle, which has been vacuum sealed.
Great video, I decant bolder wines, often a Cabernet but, I always taste the wine before I decant and have had some success with decanting a wine that I felt was tight at first open.
I just decanted a nice midrange ($35) Napa red blend (Napa Quilt Fabric…nice bottle) and the difference is pretty significant. I decanted it about an hour before pouring. Even the difference between an hour and about 2 hours when we finished the pour was noticeable. I’ll pretty much decant every red wine going forward. I’m sold.
I’m late to the party but I’ve only recently discovered Konstantin’s content, and I’ve REALLY enjoyed it. Regarding to carafe or to not, I’ve experimented and determined a rule of thumb, 20 minutes per year of age. In addition, the game changer is to carafe the wine with a closure on the carafe. By way of example, we opened an Amarone and I poured my wife a glass but carafed the rest as mentioned above. Over the course of three hours I poured small tastes into my glass and they continued to improve, so much so that the wine in my wife’s glass that had been refreshed a couple times was nowhere near the quality of experience I appreciated by letting the wine open in a sealed carafe. We’ve done this with many styles and ages of wine, and the results are consistent. We don’t drink long-aged wine, too expensive and too difficult to find, so our rule of thumb most likely only applies to wines 10 years or younger. Konstantin, if you get to Texas let us know, would love to make your acquaintance. Keep up the good work!
My man, you are rare ! I have not came across a person commenting on constantin video who enjoys or atlease know how to properly decant Amarone. Alot of people mention the common wine available either being popular or ultra high end. Chin chin my friend!
Great video. Just had to “double” carafe a 2020 nascetta as it was a bit “sulphury”. Gave it a couple of swirls and let it stand for 20 minutes…. Poured it back in the bottle (fit better in the ice bucket 👍) and drank it. Lovely. Had a 1998 Shiraz we decanted as it had enough sediments in it to almost coat the bottom of my sink😆😆. And the wine was gorgeous as soon as it was poured, an hour later and it was all bottle notes and the fruit was pretty much gone. Would you be open to doing a video on tannins? How they can get into wines, how they change over time and how to tell which kind (skin, seed, stem, barrel, chips, powder) you may be tasting?👍👍. Cheers!
I pour all my wines through a stainless fine mesh filter into a carafe. Results have always been good and I am always amazed at what has been filtered out, even with a young wine.
I have been a big fan of decanting wines, be they older Bordeaux or younger Napa Cabernet that I just couldn't resist opening. I own the same Lira Decanter from Riedel as well as the Vinum Extreme Duck and standard Vinum Extreme. My favorite is the Lira, because it just looks so great on the table. I finally became a subscriber of your channel. Keep up the great work
Thank you! It's good to see some variations. I've not had luck with righting my older bottles a few days before opening- I still end up with sludge in decanter & glass. Since I store my wines on their side, I keep them in that position throughout opening & pouring into a decanter. (Sometimes I use a decanting basket, but the bottles have a tendency to move around in those, so I find myself further ahead without one!)
I decant all of the red wines I drink by at least a few hours. But I also keep a cork ball at the top of my decanter. I find that the wines definitely benefit from this practice rather than drinking straight from the bottle as they can taste tight/closed-off.
Great video! For some reason I never tasted the wine before decanting. I bought and tried the Ermitage Le Méal after your tasting and it needed absolutely no decanting. Just a little bit of time in the glass. If I hadn’t watched video I’m sure I would have decanted the bottle as it was from 2006 and I would have thought it needed more o2 to evolve.
I use the Vinturi. Greatest wine device ever. I will sometimes Vinturi into a wide bottomed Riedel decanter & let sit for 15-30 minutes. Then I funnel the wine back into the bottle as pouring from the decanter is a bit difficult. I will sometime do a double Vinturi. Anything poured through the Vinturi is instantly better, plus you can just do one or two glasses if not drinking the entire bottle...which is rare for me.
Hi Konstantin, Outside of decanting, I'm curious as to why you opened Beychevelle with a regular waiter's friend corkscrew rather than an AhSo/2 prong bottle opener. I have always been told that the latter is best for opening older wines because they keep the cork in tact. Either way, very impressive that you were able to keep he cork intact.
I'm sure he knows the bottle was stored in great condition. As such, they are not dried out and could still be removed by a regular corkscrew. (Not to mention he's a professional and have opened hundreds if not thousands of old bottles). I would just go with a Durand, after all, how often do I get to open up a 25+ year bottle?
Great video - I do tend to decant a lot for most bottles. I do however, take sips at some intervals to see how the wine is progressing aromatically and on the palate. Cheers!
I usually pour right out of the bottle as I rarely seen better results by pouring into a carafe before serving. Yesterday I opened a bottle of 1985 Ch Soutard and poured right into a glass, it was gorgeous. I think if I were to poured the Soutard into a carafe it would dilute the nose and taste.
I don't often decant red wines. I just try to pour them gently and not disturb the sediment. I find I can avoid a cloudy glass up until the last few ounces.
The only reason I decant old wines to to prevent the sentiment (harsh tannins, etc.) from mixing with the wine. I believe the blender will cause "bottle shock" similar to a rough transport of a closed bottle of wine. I believe that shipped wines should site still in your cellar for 30 days or so before opening, especially if they are older wines.
When the cork of a bottle is broken, or if I know that an older wine has a lot of sediment, I decant the wine by slowly and carefully pouring it through an unbleached (brown) coffee filter that I position in the decanter opening. I feel that works fine for me. Can I hear some opinions from more professional drinkers than me? I would highly appreciate that.
Great refresh!!! Coincidence - i was explaining how to decant a wine to a friend just couple days before seeing this! Interesting experiment - i guess would be better to let it breathe quietly in slightly warmer place than your cellar?
Thanks for the new video. I was surpised that I have been caraffing the right way all along, as I also will pour out of the bottle first and check the nose. And, I often take an initial tasting pour from the bottle before making a decision to caraffe/decant. We opened a considerably declined California Cabernet Sauvignon just last weekend and decanting helped by removing most of the undesireable "over-ripe' flavors - it acutally got rid of a rubbery "band-aid" flavor! Has there ever been merit to opening a bottle the night before and just letting it sit on the counter with the cork gently reinserted? We had a guide on one of our latest wine tours make this suggestion.
I generally caraffe my wines by pouring it between two vessels a couple of times and then back into the bottle so I can cool it a few degrees outdoors or in the fridge
Konstanin, you rock dude. Thank you for taking your time to share with us your world of knowledge. If anyone ever doubted that wine degrees are worthwile, you are proof they indeed are. I would like to know if there is a Decanter made that has a fine screen so that sediment is captured prior to the wine hitting the bowl of the Decanter?
Thanx for another good video, in the restaurant I work we decant a fair bit of wines partly because it enhances the guest experience however I have also learnt that not all wines benefit from this as some are very delicate. My question will be, is there any rule when choosing which wine to decant? I have decanted a few young wines and in some instances they become more open and in some they lose their flavours
Hello Konstantin, recently found your channel and love your videos :) Which decanters/caraffe are those two in the beginning of the Video? Keep it up !
I clean my decanters with 2 or 3 Efferdent tablets. Let them sit for 30 minutes filled with luke warm water. Rinse with a couple of luke warm rinses, then a couple of cold. If you can still smell the Efferdent, rinse a couple more times or let it sit filled with cold water. That generally does it. I've never had a bottle compromised by the tablet smell after 'perfecting' my method. I rinse out immediately after the vessel is emptied of wine so I don't have to do the cleaning every time. But if the glasses or decanter sit in a cabinet that has a wood or polish smell, they always have to be rinsed to clear it.
I normally decant younger wines for at least an hour while I drink older wines right away and then watch the latter half bottle with more patience (1980s, 90s, 00s and I've drunk quite a few of them: clarets, mostly). I did that find a couple of very old bottles faded in the matter of few hours so I'm always on the conservative/fast side with older bottles. Younger wines certainly benefit from aeration a lot more, that is what I noticed over quite a few hundred bottles, sometimes it's even worth sipping half a glass and leave the rest in the fridge, it will taste a lot smoother the following day or couple of days. You have of course to be patient in order to appreciate that which can be difficult at times haha BTW the oldest bottle I have ever tried was a 1951 Brazilian Bordeaux blend (yes, they did make wine back then although 99%+ of it was shit) and it was awesome and it drank greatly over the course of one hour
First of all congrats on opening that 1975 bottle with just a normal corkscrew! I would have needed an ah-so, that's for sure... Regarding the younger wine, could it be that the wine in the glass was actually more exposed to oxygen than the wine in the caraffe, given the quantities you poured and the shape of both the glass and caraffe? edit: just a typo
This was my thought also. If you pour a small amount like that, swirl it, then let it sit while you carafe and blend the other portion of the bottle, it has been exposed to air as much as any of the others. Also with a wine like that, it probably doesn't need too long to open up. I would normally just let that open up in the glass anyway.
Love the videos, I was thinking the same thing, you are essentially caraffing a smaller size for the same amount of time as the large sample in the caraff. You would need two bottles, one that is opened right before tasting and a second that is put into a caraff a few hours before.
How do you know when a wine is over it’s peak when it comes to aging? I know that you don’t really know until you pop the cork and smell but what are you smelling that indicates it’s past the prime drinking age?
great video. i have a wish for the next one. i do not get clearly the concept of aging the wine. for example which varieties can im general be aged and which ones not? and how many years is the maximum? in addition,lets say i buy 7euros bottle of Tempranillo and 25euros bottle of tempranillo. does the wine quality in general affects the aging process. I bought 5 years ago Sauvignone Blanck from Strasburg. how can i know when is the "Ablaufdatum" for this wine? i think that would make a nice video :)
Great video but unfortunately the caraffe experiment was of limited value. You seemed to test if it’s better to let wine breathe in a caraffe rather than in a glass. Both wines are breathing for the same amount of time, just in different glass vessels. Not surprised the glass won as the surface area to volume ratio that is exposed to air is higher. When one caraffes a wine it’s to allow a whole bottle to breathe for some time (one obviously can’t pour out the whole bottle into separate glasses). The experiment should have been if a bottle that’s been left to breathe for some time in a caraffe is better than a freshly poured glass of the same wine (ie does it make sense to caraffe in the first place and if so for how long?). My two cents.
I was trialing whether the process of forcefully pouring wine into a carafe (caraffing) will have a different impact on the wine than just pouring the wine into the glass. Over time the result might have been different but pouring the wine into the carafe one hour before pouring it into the glass would have skewed the results. Your experiment would show whether it is sensible to expose the wine for a longer time to air - not necessarily whether caraffing makes sense.
I did an experiment once to see if I could taste different amounts of exposure to oxygen. It ranged from poured straight out of the bottle to one that had been open for two days. It would've been an added challenge to do the tasting blind like you did.
No I tend to store it in my fridge and take nips directly from the bottle over a few day period unless it's a style that tastes better at room temperature . But if it's not just cheap wine I will take my time and drink it from a wine glass.
1975 being my vintage (no, I’m not almost fifty 🤨) I had 1975 Beychevelle a few years ago and it was still drinking well - it was a half bottle actually.
Hi Konstantin!! I only change vessels when I taste a sip of the wine and feel that it would benefit with that . But genneraly, when the wine is very good, and in the Right window of consumption, I prefer to let it develop in the bottle and in the glass . Do you think that is a good strategy?
Don't know if you celebrate Thanksgiving or not....but if you do, Happy Thanksgiving! 🦃😄 I've heard of the blender trick with very young/tannic reds, but I never had the guts to try it! 😅
I find exposing wine to air for 30mins is good for any wine except the very old (over 15-20yo), get rid of any musty smell and possibly open up aroma, like some cool climate German pinot. I tried the large base decanter on an old Bordeaux (90’s) and the taste went blend after 1 hr in large decanter. I guess it would have been better just decant in small carafe and pour back into bottle just to rid of sediment.
Super interesting- maybe you can do more on this topic, especially the blender version? You said it was “strange” - didn’t sound positive but also not necessarily negative. Did it change the wine significantly? Impact on structures/flavor/smells? I heard a lot of people having different views on this topic and I would love to get more views from someone like you. Thanks as always!
I have a decanter and I wish I knew when I should be using it and when it's not needed. I wish I knew what wines to use it with! Konstantin educate us more please!! 🤣
Great comparison. I do think that with young red wines - it really varies. Some need multiple carafings. I try to decide for each wine rather than have a dictum. I am always hopeful that aerating/carafing young wines will remove the chemical smells, especially Napa cabs which can be an assault on the palate
I clicked for the Bembel...I stayed for the knowledge. Any chance we get to see some Apfelwein on your channel in the future? Very informative! Thanks for posting!
I have a question for you Sir. Why modern decanters do not have a filter for the sediment? It would be easier to the decanting because you do not have to worry about if sediment going into the decanter during the pouring phase.
I've found midrange wines that benefited enormously from aeration. I just unceremoniously splosh the wine into a 4 cup measuring cup. If there's sediment, strain it thru a damp paper towel into a superfine strainer then funnel back into the rinsed out bottle. Bingo. No hocus pocus involved.
Hallo Konstantin Ich hoffe ich liege richtig dass du auch deutsch sprichst. Ich nehme meistens zur Karaffe einen Dekantier Filter und gieße in der Regel alle Guten Rotweine einmal durch und fülle sie wieder in die Flasche weil ich den Satz bei einigen Weinen gar nicht mag. Auch bei weinen ab 30 € hab ich oft diesen Satz ist das jetzt eher hinderlich?und sollte ich dann lieber aus der Flasche gießen und den Rest einfach in der Flasche lassen ?
Den Bodensatz vom Wein trennen macht schon Sinn. Du kannst den Wein einfach aus der Flasche ausgießen, wenn der Wein nicht zusätzliche Luft braucht und bei robusteren Weinen dekantieren.
I find that benefit of oxidation can depend on the grape variety or even region. Borolo and other wines that benefit from age also seem to benefit from the oxidation, but it can have a life as you mentioned as the benefit can go as quickly as as comes or can last for hours. Also i go by bottle shape which is less important now days, classic Bordeaux bottles have that shoulder to catch those pesky crystals, where as others such as Beaujolais with its slopey shoulders has none to worry about. Fashion has ruined function. I have also seen a sommelier decant an aged port through muslin not sure how it affected it as no reference point but it was a spanking god port and I guess there was no time to stand the bottle for the requisite hour or so.
Carafing and decanting is nice if I want to be fancy, but I never felt it offered any more of an experience worth having to clean the darn things afterwards. As for sediment, pouring slowly as you showed works and to get even more I slowly turn the bottle to make the sediment stick to the sides and shoulders of the bottle. I don’t mind a slightly sandy last glass, but if you do make sure you offer that glass to a guest! -Chris
HalloKonstantin, wusste lange nicht wen ich fragen soll, aber du bist der perfekte Ansprechpartner. Und du antwortest ja fast immer, also perfekt! Ich trinke bald meinen "Geburtswein", einen 1994er Remirez de Ganuza Reserva in der 3 Liter Flasche. Soll ich den dekantieren? Und wie gestaltet man so einen Abend, sollen wir vorher noch einen anderen Wein trinken? Wenn ja, welchen? Für danach hab ich einen 1994er Porto Pocas LBV Port, aber ich finde keine Infos wie man so einen Abend gestalten soll. Du kannst mir da sicher Tipps geben! Danke im voraus, und starkes Video wie immer!
Ich würde ihn probieren und dann entscheiden. Am besten ein paar Freunde einladen und gemeinsam genießen. Bei dem Format macht es nicht unbedingt Sinn viel vorweg zu verkosten. Du brauchst aber was gutes zu Essen!
@@KonstantinBaumMasterofWine Danke Konstantin! Wusste ja, dass du antworten wirst! Danke für die Empfehlung. Ich hätte es glaub ich ähnlich geplant, ich habe nur Angst, dass der Wein nicht mehr trinkbar ist. Ich kann nicht garantieren, dass die Lagerbedingungen immer optimal waren! Aber wir werden sehen. Falls du zufällig in Österreich bist im Januar oder Februar bist du gerne eingeladen auf 2-3 Gläschen haha ;)
So I've always heard from experts as well that a younger wine should be decanted longer than an older wine. However, from my personal experience it's the opposite. A 20 year old wine will be muted after opening and fantastic in 2 hours.
I recently opened a bottle of Primitivo that initially had a strong perfume-like aroma to it, but which seemed to vanish over the course of the evening. Was my perception playing tricks on me or did I just get used to the smell? It was so intense at first that it overshadowed all other aromas of the wine, but after a few hours I could barely sense it even when I focused on it. Anyways, love the concise style and general flow of your videos, this is by far my favorite wine channel on UA-cam :)
Don't do it with every wine just with very young ones to give them some air or really old ones to seperate the depot. I usually one of these "decanting funnels" which can be used to seperate the depot from the wine aswell as giving air to it, sometime in combination with a caraffe.
You didn't mention the storage or handling of the wine bottle. All of our wines are unfiltered and hand crafted. Sediment development is almost a certainty. Regardless of source, however, our bottles are always stored "label up"; and maintained in that inclined posture prior to decanting and during decanting. This is absolutely critical to minimizing the risk of entrainment of sediment (and resulting "bitterness" as you describe). We find that young wines benefit from the aeration of decanting to oxidize the necessary storage chemical sulphite (not H2S as you said) and elderly wines benefit mainly from sediment removal -those do need to be consumed soon after, as you advise. We trust this expansion is helpful to the audience. Cheers! and PS...we never "dump" a bottle.
nedd your experise please .... i got a bottle of 2001 solaia antinori from a very satisfied client :) . now i understand that some wines benefit from decanting and some not. what would be your advise on this bottle? i personally like pooring from the bottle more because the bottle in my opinion is part of the experience,... thank you for this video !
Interesting. Just found your channel. I got 1 question (it`s gonna be weird). How long can I keep my wine after decanting? Can I put my leftovers into smal bottle and keep for some weeks? Thank you in advance.
I once read a story of a guy with more money than good taste who was eating in a 2 Michelin star restaurant. He ordered a bottle of Chateau Pétrus and the sommelier very carefully opened the €1500 bottle, gently poured the wine and gave it to the gentleman to taste. And then nearly got a heart attack when the guy said it was to warm and he wanted some ice cubes…
Excellent upload, Konstantin. I hardly decant / caraffe a wine. It's a lot of activity, not really leading to a better experience, imho. Right out of the bottle and let ik happen in the glass over time. Champagne in a caraf is amazing, though. When you get rid of the fizzy part of the wine, a whole new world may emerge. A 'still Champagne' can be a fascinating experience. Nice to see the Beychevelle still had some life in it after 45 years. Wasn't 1975 tannic from day 1 to eternity?
should give more info, like name of wine etc, in the info area. i missed the name :( i work for italians that make wine every aug sept, we get lots of different grapes from Lodi california, dome of the wine we make has sediment like that, its not filtered perfectly, is that a good thing? its all old italians that come from all over the city to make it, i'm canadian, so i don't know anything about quality or class, so your opinion would be greatly appreciated cheers
would it be better to clean the cork area of the bottle before you de-cork it? Would their be an issue with the wine using a de-corking device with a single needle that injects R134A to pop the cork out claims to have NO effect on the wine!
Isn't the wine that you poured in the glass a form of the carafe one? especially in you don't drink it straight way. To me it seems that the amount poured in the glass had same exposure like the full bottle poured into the carafe. Love your channel by the way!
Good info. I certainly think most modern wine's about as good as its going to get straight out of the bottle, but for a big glug glug dinner it can be convenient, and make the table work better if you put the wine into something. Also hides the fact that you got it from an unfashionable shop. 🤣👍
I let my wine breathe as it is poured from a bottle into a wine glass, given a little swirl and a smell...... and voila, 5 seconds later it is ready to drink.
Seriously though........A wine that is a little rough around the edges will usually settle down and open up upon consuming the second pour of a bottle. Thank you for your honest assessment of the pro's and cons of decanting and caraffing of wine. Very informative.
Great Channel, I'm impressed how you are always willing to be honest and take a blind challenge regardless if you guess right or wrong. That shows true unbiased results at the expense of always being right, which really doesn't matter, because we all know you ARE The Master of Wine! Thank you for your videos, very fun and educational.
Thanks a lot for another great wine lesson! I always caraffe the wine before drinking, when I'm quite sure that the wine is not in it's drinking window yet - exactly as you mentioned. For example, did it yesterday with a beautiful Madiran wine from 2015. This tannat wine is somewhat rustic and grippy, though the carrafing for about an hour and a half rounded its edges and the wine has just greatly complented the beef wellington we had at lunch. At the wine store I work at, we use a pouring device which is connected to argon, so that after each pour for a customer the bottle is filled with argon to prevent oxidation. The only disadvantage of this is that most customers fill some sort of reduction at first smell, but it's great when after giving a wine to breath for just couple of minutes everyone gets an evidence for a difference between just poured and caraffed wine.
Hi Konstantin, here a few video ideas: 1. How to pick the right wine in the supermarket/online/etc 2. How to pair wine and food 3. How to become a wine expert (know more about wines...) 4. How to properly serve wines 5. wine knigge ....
Thanks!
Nice video. I don’t decant because I pour directly from the barrel :). When I have a bottle of wine I usually decant wine, mostly the red one. I think most wines will benefit or at least won’t loose from decanting.
I've been drinking wine at least semi-"seriously" for over 50 years now. The only thing I _really_ know is how little I understand wine. I just discovered your channel today and have already learned several new things. Gotta love it, right?
I carafe most of the times when corking up a bottle of red wine. I pour it into the wide carafe, let it sit for 15 min, then put the carafe in the fridge for 15 min. In my experience the wine opens up very well almost everytime, as I sometimes try a small glass before carafing and I notice a difference before and after. This is especially the case for cheaper wines, you kind of remove the rough edge from them by getting rid of the residual CO2 that otherwise gives it a bitter finish, as well as polymerize the tannins into something smoother. 30 minutes in total to me is enough time for it to open up and take off that roughness, but you still don't miss out on any part of the journey as the wine evolves in the glass.
For a finer white wine I just pour a small glass to glugg in some air into the wine in the bottle and put it back into the fridge for 30 minutes before serving. I especially do this with Chablis as I've noticed they need some air to really show that "fruit forwardness".
Anyway, this is just what works for me. You can absolutely give it more time in the glass instead.
That's pretty similar to what I do (at least for the last few bottles we had).
I always noticed that the unpleasant smells were gone and the taste of fruit was more present.
Dam it! that was fun!!! I love your honest reaction at the beginning.
I quite like caraffing wines the day before serving, and then pour them back into the bottle with a funnel. Put the cork back in and let it mature with the "fresh" oxygen over night. Seems to make the biggest difference for me.
It doesnt go stale?
@@seminky5341 shouldn't go stale over night, especially not in the fridge, no. But I also only do it for big and bold red wines, with enough tannin and body to take it.. try it :)
Thank you for keeping the blending scene short…lol. And love to see that wines are not too sensitive about breathing and temperature (from previous video). Unless for sediment, I like my wine to breathe and grow in the glass (usually the second glass- the first one disappears pretty quickly..)
Hi Konstantin, love your videos and find them inspirational!! Studying right now for my sommelier level 1 exam and search for inspiration in all the sources
Very helpful video.
At a friends place the other day and spotted a 1978 Fairmont Cab Sav. , Napa Valley hidden in his rack.
I told him the cork was going off😁so we had to pop it.
Bloody beautiful
Loved this video and your content just keeps getting better! On a side note; I have never seen any evidence online that people could taste the difference after caraffing a wine vs not. I have looked for articles and on UA-cam and have never seen proof of a blind tasting where anybody got it right consistently. I fear that wine ‘growing in the glass’ may be a myth, which is odd because I definitely feel like I notice the difference. Could it be that reaction with oxygen does not play the role we think? It seems increasingly likely to me that a complex wine improves in flavor ‘in the glass’ because you just keep noticing new flavors as you get desensitized to the more dominant flavors. This would be a function of our biology rather than the breathing of the wine. Just a thought. If you have any resources on this subject please let me know! I am very eager to learn.
You should try it out yourself. I think wine changes over time in glass. The question is whether it is getting better...
You raise many good points. One factor that has confounded me personally is the change in temperature - sometimes the wine seems to open up because it's getting a bit warmer, and that lets some of its aromas shine better. Oxygen plays no role there. Also, I've experienced the opposite, especially on the palate, when a wine becomes duller as it gets warmer.
It'd be complicated to determine accurately the effects of air in isolation, especially for whites (maybe we'd need to sit outside on a winter day? 😬).
I'll just posit you this; if exposure to air had no impact on a wine, then there should be no difference from the minute I popped the cork on a bottle to after that same bottle sat on my kitchen counter for a week.
Obviously exposure to air impacts wine, both for good and bad.
In my experience (not a wine master, not a sommelier, just 15 years selling wine) almost all wines benefit from some exposure to air. Some get a good result with 30 minutes, but most are 90 minutes to 120 minutes. Big Italian reds and Bordeaux are often better 24 to 48 hours after opening.
I even had a central coast zin that sat on my kitchen table for a week after pouring half the bottle the first day showing and I thought it was going to be vinegar. I poured myself a glass just to see; and it was absolutely marvelous. It was like a perfectly baked blueberry pie; a bit of flaky toasted top crust, followed by pure baked blueberry (not that overly sweet canned pie filling taste - just pure warm blueberries) with a hint of spice (nutmeg, cinnamon), just absolutely stellar. It was not the best wine I've ever had, but it still stands as the best zin I've ever tasted.
Time and exposure to air definitely have an impact on taste.
Just recently I realized how much it can help when I had several bottles of wine that really improved after dacanting. Often, especially younger wines can have some unpleasant smells to it that vanished after a short time in the decanter.
But I did make the same experience with a bit older wines (here vintages 2011-2013) that noticeably gained after decanting.
My conclusion is: decanting will seldomly harm the wine but mostly will help the wine to open up.
I have a decanter but i try to use it as little as possible. With the vast majority of wines it's just not necessary. Cheers!
Yes for older clarets, Rhones etc. Yes for younger wines that need a bit of air time. No for Burgundy, Beaujolais or wines designed to be drunk young. I double decanted a 2014 Barolo last night and it definitely improved it. Will check soon on the other half of the bottle, which has been vacuum sealed.
Great video, I decant bolder wines, often a Cabernet but, I always taste the wine before I decant and have had some success with decanting a wine that I felt was tight at first open.
I just decanted a nice midrange ($35) Napa red blend (Napa Quilt Fabric…nice bottle) and the difference is pretty significant. I decanted it about an hour before pouring. Even the difference between an hour and about 2 hours when we finished the pour was noticeable. I’ll pretty much decant every red wine going forward. I’m sold.
I’m late to the party but I’ve only recently discovered Konstantin’s content, and I’ve REALLY enjoyed it.
Regarding to carafe or to not, I’ve experimented and determined a rule of thumb, 20 minutes per year of age. In addition, the game changer is to carafe the wine with a closure on the carafe.
By way of example, we opened an Amarone and I poured my wife a glass but carafed the rest as mentioned above. Over the course of three hours I poured small tastes into my glass and they continued to improve, so much so that the wine in my wife’s glass that had been refreshed a couple times was nowhere near the quality of experience I appreciated by letting the wine open in a sealed carafe.
We’ve done this with many styles and ages of wine, and the results are consistent.
We don’t drink long-aged wine, too expensive and too difficult to find, so our rule of thumb most likely only applies to wines 10 years or younger.
Konstantin, if you get to Texas let us know, would love to make your acquaintance. Keep up the good work!
My man, you are rare ! I have not came across a person commenting on constantin video who enjoys or atlease know how to properly decant Amarone.
Alot of people mention the common wine available either being popular or ultra high end.
Chin chin my friend!
Great video. Just had to “double” carafe a 2020 nascetta as it was a bit “sulphury”. Gave it a couple of swirls and let it stand for 20 minutes…. Poured it back in the bottle (fit better in the ice bucket 👍) and drank it. Lovely. Had a 1998 Shiraz we decanted as it had enough sediments in it to almost coat the bottom of my sink😆😆. And the wine was gorgeous as soon as it was poured, an hour later and it was all bottle notes and the fruit was pretty much gone. Would you be open to doing a video on tannins? How they can get into wines, how they change over time and how to tell which kind (skin, seed, stem, barrel, chips, powder) you may be tasting?👍👍. Cheers!
I pour all my wines through a stainless fine mesh filter into a carafe. Results have always been good and I am always amazed at what has been filtered out, even with a young wine.
I have been a big fan of decanting wines, be they older Bordeaux or younger Napa Cabernet that I just couldn't resist opening. I own the same Lira Decanter from Riedel as well as the Vinum Extreme Duck and standard Vinum Extreme. My favorite is the Lira, because it just looks so great on the table. I finally became a subscriber of your channel. Keep up the great work
Thank you!
Thank you! It's good to see some variations.
I've not had luck with righting my older bottles a few days before opening- I still end up with sludge in decanter & glass.
Since I store my wines on their side, I keep them in that position throughout opening & pouring into a decanter. (Sometimes I use a decanting basket, but the bottles have a tendency to move around in those, so I find myself further ahead without one!)
I decant all of the red wines I drink by at least a few hours. But I also keep a cork ball at the top of my decanter. I find that the wines definitely benefit from this practice rather than drinking straight from the bottle as they can taste tight/closed-off.
Great video! For some reason I never tasted the wine before decanting. I bought and tried the Ermitage Le Méal after your tasting and it needed absolutely no decanting. Just a little bit of time in the glass. If I hadn’t watched video I’m sure I would have decanted the bottle as it was from 2006 and I would have thought it needed more o2 to evolve.
I use the Vinturi. Greatest wine device ever. I will sometimes Vinturi into a wide bottomed Riedel decanter & let sit for 15-30 minutes. Then I funnel the wine back into the bottle as pouring from the decanter is a bit difficult. I will sometime do a double Vinturi. Anything poured through the Vinturi is instantly better, plus you can just do one or two glasses if not drinking the entire bottle...which is rare for me.
Love watching your show while I cook!
Glad you enjoy it!
Hi Konstantin,
Outside of decanting, I'm curious as to why you opened Beychevelle with a regular waiter's friend corkscrew rather than an AhSo/2 prong bottle opener. I have always been told that the latter is best for opening older wines because they keep the cork in tact. Either way, very impressive that you were able to keep he cork intact.
I like to live dangerously... 😉 I will use my The Durand at some point.
I'm sure he knows the bottle was stored in great condition. As such, they are not dried out and could still be removed by a regular corkscrew. (Not to mention he's a professional and have opened hundreds if not thousands of old bottles). I would just go with a Durand, after all, how often do I get to open up a 25+ year bottle?
Great video - I do tend to decant a lot for most bottles. I do however, take sips at some intervals to see how the wine is progressing aromatically and on the palate. Cheers!
Good point!
I usually pour right out of the bottle as I rarely seen better results by pouring into a carafe before serving. Yesterday I opened a bottle of 1985 Ch Soutard and poured right into a glass, it was gorgeous. I think if I were to poured the Soutard into a carafe it would dilute the nose and taste.
I don't often decant red wines. I just try to pour them gently and not disturb the sediment. I find I can avoid a cloudy glass up until the last few ounces.
Well done Konstantin, especially when you were removing that old cork, not easy at all!
Thanks 👍
The only reason I decant old wines to to prevent the sentiment (harsh tannins, etc.) from mixing with the wine. I believe the blender will cause "bottle shock" similar to a rough transport of a closed bottle of wine. I believe that shipped wines should site still in your cellar for 30 days or so before opening, especially if they are older wines.
When the cork of a bottle is broken, or if I know that an older wine has a lot of sediment, I decant the wine by slowly and carefully pouring it through an unbleached (brown) coffee filter that I position in the decanter opening. I feel that works fine for me. Can I hear some opinions from more professional drinkers than me? I would highly appreciate that.
Yes, that's a good method. Instead of a brown filter one can also use some muslin cloth.
I do exactly the same
Use a clean cotton cloth. Cheesecloth is fine for this.
Great refresh!!! Coincidence - i was explaining how to decant a wine to a friend just couple days before seeing this!
Interesting experiment - i guess would be better to let it breathe quietly in slightly warmer place than your cellar?
Thanks for the new video. I was surpised that I have been caraffing the right way all along, as I also will pour out of the bottle first and check the nose. And, I often take an initial tasting pour from the bottle before making a decision to caraffe/decant. We opened a considerably declined California Cabernet Sauvignon just last weekend and decanting helped by removing most of the undesireable "over-ripe' flavors - it acutally got rid of a rubbery "band-aid" flavor! Has there ever been merit to opening a bottle the night before and just letting it sit on the counter with the cork gently reinserted? We had a guide on one of our latest wine tours make this suggestion.
I generally caraffe my wines by pouring it between two vessels a couple of times and then back into the bottle so I can cool it a few degrees outdoors or in the fridge
Konstanin, you rock dude. Thank you for taking your time to share with us your world of knowledge. If anyone ever doubted that wine degrees are worthwile, you are proof they indeed are. I would like to know if there is a Decanter made that has a fine screen so that sediment is captured prior to the wine hitting the bowl of the Decanter?
Thank you. Not that I know of...
Great video, thank you! I have problems with the service, so l'll use it for training 🍾
Thanx for another good video, in the restaurant I work we decant a fair bit of wines partly because it enhances the guest experience however I have also learnt that not all wines benefit from this as some are very delicate. My question will be, is there any rule when choosing which wine to decant? I have decanted a few young wines and in some instances they become more open and in some they lose their flavours
Hello Konstantin, recently found your channel and love your videos :) Which decanters/caraffe are those two in the beginning of the Video?
Keep it up !
Great video, would have been interested to throw in something like a wine aerator to the mix to see how it stacks up
I clean my decanters with 2 or 3 Efferdent tablets. Let them sit for 30 minutes filled with luke warm water. Rinse with a couple of luke warm rinses, then a couple of cold. If you can still smell the Efferdent, rinse a couple more times or let it sit filled with cold water. That generally does it. I've never had a bottle compromised by the tablet smell after 'perfecting' my method. I rinse out immediately after the vessel is emptied of wine so I don't have to do the cleaning every time. But if the glasses or decanter sit in a cabinet that has a wood or polish smell, they always have to be rinsed to clear it.
I normally decant younger wines for at least an hour while I drink older wines right away and then watch the latter half bottle with more patience (1980s, 90s, 00s and I've drunk quite a few of them: clarets, mostly). I did that find a couple of very old bottles faded in the matter of few hours so I'm always on the conservative/fast side with older bottles.
Younger wines certainly benefit from aeration a lot more, that is what I noticed over quite a few hundred bottles, sometimes it's even worth sipping half a glass and leave the rest in the fridge, it will taste a lot smoother the following day or couple of days. You have of course to be patient in order to appreciate that which can be difficult at times haha
BTW the oldest bottle I have ever tried was a 1951 Brazilian Bordeaux blend (yes, they did make wine back then although 99%+ of it was shit) and it was awesome and it drank greatly over the course of one hour
I always decant decent wines. I think it helps for sure. I just use a purposely built strainer for sediment
First of all congrats on opening that 1975 bottle with just a normal corkscrew! I would have needed an ah-so, that's for sure...
Regarding the younger wine, could it be that the wine in the glass was actually more exposed to oxygen than the wine in the caraffe, given the quantities you poured and the shape of both the glass and caraffe?
edit: just a typo
This was my thought also. If you pour a small amount like that, swirl it, then let it sit while you carafe and blend the other portion of the bottle, it has been exposed to air as much as any of the others. Also with a wine like that, it probably doesn't need too long to open up. I would normally just let that open up in the glass anyway.
Yes, maybe. It is not really clear whether the amount of air in the vessel or the force of pouring it into said vessel has a bigger impact.
Love the videos, I was thinking the same thing, you are essentially caraffing a smaller size for the same amount of time as the large sample in the caraff. You would need two bottles, one that is opened right before tasting and a second that is put into a caraff a few hours before.
Thank you! I really enjoyed this video👍
How do you know when a wine is over it’s peak when it comes to aging? I know that you don’t really know until you pop the cork and smell but what are you smelling that indicates it’s past the prime drinking age?
great video. i have a wish for the next one. i do not get clearly the concept of aging the wine. for example which varieties can im general be aged and which ones not? and how many years is the maximum? in addition,lets say i buy 7euros bottle of Tempranillo and 25euros bottle of tempranillo. does the wine quality in general affects the aging process. I bought 5 years ago Sauvignone Blanck from Strasburg. how can i know when is the "Ablaufdatum" for this wine? i think that would make a nice video :)
Great suggestion - it is coming soon.
Thank you for those amazing videos!! Keep going!
Thank you! Will do!
Great video but unfortunately the caraffe experiment was of limited value. You seemed to test if it’s better to let wine breathe in a caraffe rather than in a glass. Both wines are breathing for the same amount of time, just in different glass vessels. Not surprised the glass won as the surface area to volume ratio that is exposed to air is higher. When one caraffes a wine it’s to allow a whole bottle to breathe for some time (one obviously can’t pour out the whole bottle into separate glasses). The experiment should have been if a bottle that’s been left to breathe for some time in a caraffe is better than a freshly poured glass of the same wine (ie does it make sense to caraffe in the first place and if so for how long?). My two cents.
I was trialing whether the process of forcefully pouring wine into a carafe (caraffing) will have a different impact on the wine than just pouring the wine into the glass. Over time the result might have been different but pouring the wine into the carafe one hour before pouring it into the glass would have skewed the results. Your experiment would show whether it is sensible to expose the wine for a longer time to air - not necessarily whether caraffing makes sense.
One has definitely just disappeared up their own arse. My two cents.
I did an experiment once to see if I could taste different amounts of exposure to oxygen. It ranged from poured straight out of the bottle to one that had been open for two days. It would've been an added challenge to do the tasting blind like you did.
What were the results?
@@letsdazed1824 The one open for two days was more mellow and less funky.
No I tend to store it in my fridge and take nips directly from the bottle over a few day period unless it's a style that tastes better at room temperature . But if it's not just cheap wine I will take my time and drink it from a wine glass.
1975 being my vintage (no, I’m not almost fifty 🤨) I had 1975 Beychevelle a few years ago and it was still drinking well - it was a half bottle actually.
I love the bembel in the background
Breathing in the cup has been the most successful for me
It would be interested to hear your opinions on double dicanting, especially with wines like vin jaune
Hi Konstantin!! I only change vessels when I taste a sip of the wine and feel that it would benefit with that . But genneraly, when the wine is very good, and in the Right window of consumption, I prefer to let it develop in the bottle and in the glass . Do you think that is a good strategy?
Great video Konstantin.
I am wondering if one might add the sediment that's left in the bottle into a gravy?
Seán
Never done that. It is quite gritty.
@@KonstantinBaumMasterofWine I’d strain the gravy through a sieve
Don't know if you celebrate Thanksgiving or not....but if you do, Happy Thanksgiving! 🦃😄
I've heard of the blender trick with very young/tannic reds, but I never had the guts to try it! 😅
I find exposing wine to air for 30mins is good for any wine except the very old (over 15-20yo), get rid of any musty smell and possibly open up aroma, like some cool climate German pinot.
I tried the large base decanter on an old Bordeaux (90’s) and the taste went blend after 1 hr in large decanter. I guess it would have been better just decant in small carafe and pour back into bottle just to rid of sediment.
Super interesting- maybe you can do more on this topic, especially the blender version? You said it was “strange” - didn’t sound positive but also not necessarily negative. Did it change the wine significantly? Impact on structures/flavor/smells? I heard a lot of people having different views on this topic and I would love to get more views from someone like you. Thanks as always!
Great suggestion!
I have a decanter and I wish I knew when I should be using it and when it's not needed. I wish I knew what wines to use it with! Konstantin educate us more please!! 🤣
Great comparison. I do think that with young red wines - it really varies. Some need multiple carafings. I try to decide for each wine rather than have a dictum. I am always hopeful that aerating/carafing young wines will remove the chemical smells, especially Napa cabs which can be an assault on the palate
I clicked for the Bembel...I stayed for the knowledge. Any chance we get to see some Apfelwein on your channel in the future? Very informative! Thanks for posting!
I have a question for you Sir. Why modern decanters do not have a filter for the sediment? It would be easier to the decanting because you do not have to worry about if sediment going into the decanter during the pouring phase.
Wow to decant a 50 year old, it's amazing my friend.
I've found midrange wines that benefited enormously from aeration. I just unceremoniously splosh the wine into a 4 cup measuring cup. If there's sediment, strain it thru a damp paper towel into a superfine strainer then funnel back into the rinsed out bottle. Bingo. No hocus pocus involved.
Hallo Konstantin
Ich hoffe ich liege richtig dass du auch deutsch sprichst.
Ich nehme meistens zur Karaffe einen Dekantier Filter und gieße in der Regel alle Guten Rotweine einmal durch und fülle sie wieder in die Flasche weil ich den Satz bei einigen Weinen gar nicht mag. Auch bei weinen ab 30 € hab ich oft diesen Satz ist das jetzt eher hinderlich?und sollte ich dann lieber aus der Flasche gießen und den Rest einfach in der Flasche lassen ?
Den Bodensatz vom Wein trennen macht schon Sinn. Du kannst den Wein einfach aus der Flasche ausgießen, wenn der Wein nicht zusätzliche Luft braucht und bei robusteren Weinen dekantieren.
Always interesting and entertaining. And I admire even always your english vocabular, jealous…😀
Thanks!
I find that benefit of oxidation can depend on the grape variety or even region. Borolo and other wines that benefit from age also seem to benefit from the oxidation, but it can have a life as you mentioned as the benefit can go as quickly as as comes or can last for hours. Also i go by bottle shape which is less important now days, classic Bordeaux bottles have that shoulder to catch those pesky crystals, where as others such as Beaujolais with its slopey shoulders has none to worry about. Fashion has ruined function.
I have also seen a sommelier decant an aged port through muslin not sure how it affected it as no reference point but it was a spanking god port and I guess there was no time to stand the bottle for the requisite hour or so.
Carafing and decanting is nice if I want to be fancy, but I never felt it offered any more of an experience worth having to clean the darn things afterwards. As for sediment, pouring slowly as you showed works and to get even more I slowly turn the bottle to make the sediment stick to the sides and shoulders of the bottle. I don’t mind a slightly sandy last glass, but if you do make sure you offer that glass to a guest! -Chris
HalloKonstantin, wusste lange nicht wen ich fragen soll, aber du bist der perfekte Ansprechpartner. Und du antwortest ja fast immer, also perfekt!
Ich trinke bald meinen "Geburtswein", einen 1994er Remirez de Ganuza Reserva in der 3 Liter Flasche. Soll ich den dekantieren? Und wie gestaltet man so einen Abend, sollen wir vorher noch einen anderen Wein trinken? Wenn ja, welchen? Für danach hab ich einen 1994er Porto Pocas LBV Port, aber ich finde keine Infos wie man so einen Abend gestalten soll. Du kannst mir da sicher Tipps geben!
Danke im voraus, und starkes Video wie immer!
Ich würde ihn probieren und dann entscheiden. Am besten ein paar Freunde einladen und gemeinsam genießen. Bei dem Format macht es nicht unbedingt Sinn viel vorweg zu verkosten. Du brauchst aber was gutes zu Essen!
@@KonstantinBaumMasterofWine Danke Konstantin! Wusste ja, dass du antworten wirst!
Danke für die Empfehlung. Ich hätte es glaub ich ähnlich geplant, ich habe nur Angst, dass der Wein nicht mehr trinkbar ist. Ich kann nicht garantieren, dass die Lagerbedingungen immer optimal waren! Aber wir werden sehen. Falls du zufällig in Österreich bist im Januar oder Februar bist du gerne eingeladen auf 2-3 Gläschen haha ;)
could you do a video on Decanting/Caraffing young bold white wines and thoughts whether it helps open then up
Hahahahhah we released a similar video today by coincidence!
So I've always heard from experts as well that a younger wine should be decanted longer than an older wine. However, from my personal experience it's the opposite. A 20 year old wine will be muted after opening and fantastic in 2 hours.
I recently opened a bottle of Primitivo that initially had a strong perfume-like aroma to it, but which seemed to vanish over the course of the evening. Was my perception playing tricks on me or did I just get used to the smell? It was so intense at first that it overshadowed all other aromas of the wine, but after a few hours I could barely sense it even when I focused on it.
Anyways, love the concise style and general flow of your videos, this is by far my favorite wine channel on UA-cam :)
What would it take for you to taste the wine I mad for grading? I'm Tyrone Farmer please let me know
Don't do it with every wine just with very young ones to give them some air or really old ones to seperate the depot. I usually one of these "decanting funnels" which can be used to seperate the depot from the wine aswell as giving air to it, sometime in combination with a caraffe.
Hi Konstantin, what’s your opinion on decanting Pinot Noir? Would you ever decant one? Thanks in advance
As I favor older wines, 1994 is now my window, I decanter in most cases. Also older wines get better more quickly in a karaf
You didn't mention the storage or handling of the wine bottle. All of our wines are unfiltered and hand crafted. Sediment development is almost a certainty. Regardless of source, however, our bottles are always stored "label up"; and maintained in that inclined posture prior to decanting and during decanting. This is absolutely critical to minimizing the risk of entrainment of sediment (and resulting "bitterness" as you describe). We find that young wines benefit from the aeration of decanting to oxidize the necessary storage chemical sulphite (not H2S as you said) and elderly wines benefit mainly from sediment removal -those do need to be consumed soon after, as you advise. We trust this expansion is helpful to the audience. Cheers! and PS...we never "dump" a bottle.
nedd your experise please ....
i got a bottle of 2001 solaia antinori from a very satisfied client :) .
now i understand that some wines benefit from decanting and some not.
what would be your advise on this bottle? i personally like pooring from the bottle more because the bottle in my opinion is part of the experience,... thank you for this video !
I think Peter from Wineking will be able to tell the difference. Another devious experiment Jay can try with Peter next.
Interesting. Just found your channel.
I got 1 question (it`s gonna be weird). How long can I keep my wine after decanting? Can I put my leftovers into smal bottle and keep for some weeks?
Thank you in advance.
Not necessarily for weeks but for a few days for sure!
I once read a story of a guy with more money than good taste who was eating in a 2 Michelin star restaurant. He ordered a bottle of Chateau Pétrus and the sommelier very carefully opened the €1500 bottle, gently poured the wine and gave it to the gentleman to taste. And then nearly got a heart attack when the guy said it was to warm and he wanted some ice cubes…
Q - if you want to decant a wine for a few hours, how can I do and drink it at a particular temperature (eg, 55 degrees (F))?
How do you feel about the sediment mesh filters?
Excellent upload, Konstantin. I hardly decant / caraffe a wine. It's a lot of activity, not really leading to a better experience, imho. Right out of the bottle and let ik happen in the glass over time. Champagne in a caraf is amazing, though. When you get rid of the fizzy part of the wine, a whole new world may emerge. A 'still Champagne' can be a fascinating experience.
Nice to see the Beychevelle still had some life in it after 45 years. Wasn't 1975 tannic from day 1 to eternity?
should give more info, like name of wine etc, in the info area. i missed the name :( i work for italians that make wine every aug sept, we get lots of different grapes from Lodi california, dome of the wine we make has sediment like that, its not filtered perfectly, is that a good thing? its all old italians that come from all over the city to make it, i'm canadian, so i don't know anything about quality or class, so your opinion would be greatly appreciated cheers
Hi Konstantin how do you recommend to clean the Riedal Amadeo??
wonderful video, as always. thanks!
would it be better to clean the cork area of the bottle before you de-cork it? Would their be an issue with the wine using a de-corking device with a single needle that injects R134A to pop the cork out claims to have NO effect on the wine!
Isn't the wine that you poured in the glass a form of the carafe one? especially in you don't drink it straight way.
To me it seems that the amount poured in the glass had same exposure like the full bottle poured into the carafe.
Love your channel by the way!
What carafe are you using? Thanks!
Good info. I certainly think most modern wine's about as good as its going to get straight out of the bottle, but for a big glug glug dinner it can be convenient, and make the table work better if you put the wine into something. Also hides the fact that you got it from an unfashionable shop. 🤣👍
That happens to me, sometimes the wine straight from the bottle, is more open than the carafe one. Each wine has it’s own personality!😊
I was waiting for you to say something about white water caraffing. ☺️
Do you know about Aveine?? do you think isnit worth it for use?
What do you think about fine screen filters for wine sediment? There are some specifically made for wine, but I haven't tried one yet.