Wine Guide: Serving Wine
There's
really no mystery to serving wine, but here are a couple
of tips that may help:
Temperature: In general, white wines
should be served chilled and red wine at room
temperature. If you're pushed for time, then put the
bottle in an ice bucket filled half with ice and half
with cold water. This will bring the wine down to the
desired temperature in about twenty minutes. For most
reds, room temperature is ideal, unless the room is a
balmy 80°F, of course. Light, fruity reds, like
Beaujolais, are best served a little cool, especially on
a warm summer day. Champagne, dessert wine, most sherry
and rosé should be treated as white. Red port should be
served at room temperature but tawny port can be
chilled.
Decanting: This is the process of
pouring off any sediment that has been deposited in the
bottle over time to create 'clean wine'. It is
frequently done with vintage port or older red wines
that have spent many years in a bottle. The vast
majority of wines do not need to be decanted at all, but
if you do need to do it, simply pour the wine slowly
into a glass decanter or jug keeping an eye on the neck
of the bottle. When you see sediment in the neck, it's
time to stop. Decanting can also help the wine
"breathe".
Breathing: If a wine has spent many
years locked up in a bottle, away from the air, it will
benefit from a little breathing time. This can take
place in the glass or in a decanter and twenty to thirty
minutes should suffice. Even young wines can benefit
from a little breathing time as it allows the wine to
open up and really show what it's made of. You can test
this by tasting a wine immediately after opening it and
then see how your second glass tastes some twenty
minutes later. There's often quite a difference. That's
also why, if you're opening several reds, open them all
at once. You give your next bottle a chance to breathe,
while you are enjoying the current one. On the other
hand, whites generally don't need to be opened ahead of
time, as the goal is usually to retain their freshness.
Glassware: The best glasses for
appreciating wine are made of plain, thin, clear glass.
Heavy, cut glass makes it difficult to see the wine
properly. The glass should have a wide bowl tapering to
a narrow opening; a tulip shape, in other words. This
allows room for the wine to be swirled in the glass
while concentrating the aromas at the rim. Champagne
should be served in tall flutes or tall, thin
tulip-shaped glasses. Today there are many specialty
glasses designed to be used with different grape
varieties. While these may, indeed, enhance the
attributes of the different wines, they really aren't
necessary.
Fill level: The glass should never
be filled more than about half full. This allows room
for swirling the wine around in the glass to release its
aromas without splashing it all over the table. A good
way to achieve this is to leave the glass on the table,
hold the stem at the base and make small, quick circles
with the base. Try it!
Always taste the wine yourself before serving it to
guests in case it's gone bad.
If you don't finish the bottle, most wines will keep
quite happily for a couple of days with the cork stuck
back in the bottle, keeping the air out. Whites are
better off in the fridge and reds left out at room
temperature. It's impossible to say exactly how long a
wine will keep once open because each wine is different,
but in general the higher quality the wine, the longer
it will keep. |