ChatterBank2 mins ago
Port/wine funnel
11 Answers
I decided to buy my husband and bottle of Warres 1980 vintage port. 'Simple', I thought. Ha! How wrong I was. Now I know I need decanter, beads, muslin and a funnel! What I can't figure out is, are wine funnels different? They seem to have extra exit holes to areate the wine, is that right for a vintage port? Or do I just need a funnel that flows straight through?
I really am a novice at this, so any help would be hugely appreciated.
Cheers muchly,
Lorien
I really am a novice at this, so any help would be hugely appreciated.
Cheers muchly,
Lorien
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by lunaraine. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Decant port through coffee filter paper - in a plastic funnel - into any large jug.
Pour carefully with a light beind the bottle - stop just before the 'crust' starts to come out.
Rinse port bottle thoroughly, finishing with very hot, clean water - return port to bottle via funnel & another coffee filter paper.
Job done - enjoy :)
Pour carefully with a light beind the bottle - stop just before the 'crust' starts to come out.
Rinse port bottle thoroughly, finishing with very hot, clean water - return port to bottle via funnel & another coffee filter paper.
Job done - enjoy :)
-- answer removed --
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Port_wine
"Port wines that are unfiltered (such as vintage ports, crusted ports and some LBVs), form a sediment (or crust) in the bottle and require decanting. This process also allows the port to breathe; however, how long before serving is dependent on the age of the port (particularly in the case of vintage ports, which, once decanted, are recommended to be *** consumed within 3–4 days ***)."
Arrhhhh .... miniatures for me then ;-)
"Port wines that are unfiltered (such as vintage ports, crusted ports and some LBVs), form a sediment (or crust) in the bottle and require decanting. This process also allows the port to breathe; however, how long before serving is dependent on the age of the port (particularly in the case of vintage ports, which, once decanted, are recommended to be *** consumed within 3–4 days ***)."
Arrhhhh .... miniatures for me then ;-)
http://www.winelovers...com/port/decant.phtml
Darn it, Luna has me surfing for port info all morning now ! :-)
Darn it, Luna has me surfing for port info all morning now ! :-)
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