Wherever and whenever
you’re serving wine … keeping your guests glasses full is a real art and you
need to know how to pour a glass of wine.
In fact the best
advice is actually based on “nots”
There are three
“nots” to pouring: not splashing, not dripping, and not over filling.
Not Splashing
Hold the mouth of the bottle no more than an inch or so above the glass when pouring.
Not Splashing
Hold the mouth of the bottle no more than an inch or so above the glass when pouring.
Any higher and
the wine will splash as it hits the bottom of the glass or the wine remaining
in the glass.
Not Dripping
There is something of an art to pouring a glass of wine without dripping it on the table. It takes a bit of practice but it is worth the trouble. As you finish pouring you must simultaneously lift the neck of the bottle while twisting it clockwise about 1/4 turn or so. This will make that nasty little drip fall back into the bottle rather than on the table cloth.
Not Dripping
There is something of an art to pouring a glass of wine without dripping it on the table. It takes a bit of practice but it is worth the trouble. As you finish pouring you must simultaneously lift the neck of the bottle while twisting it clockwise about 1/4 turn or so. This will make that nasty little drip fall back into the bottle rather than on the table cloth.
Not Over Filling
For red wine
between 4 and 6 ounces and for white wine between 3 and 4 ounces would
constitute a full glass of wine. If you use a properly sized and proportioned
glass, filling the glass to the point where the bowl begins to curve inward
will provide just about this quantity of wine. Over filling the glass reduces
the area in which the aromas concentrate, reduces the surface area of the wine
exposed to the air and hinders the ability to swirl the wine without spillage.
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