Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
Reply |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "James Silverton" > wrote in message ... > Theron wrote on Thu, 26 Mar 2009 13:29:01 -0700: > > >> "James Silverton" > wrote in >> message ... >>> sf wrote on Wed, 25 Mar 2009 20:35:44 -0700: >>> >>>>> "James Silverton" > wrote in >>>>> message ... >>>>>> Hello All! >>>>>> >>>>>> The recent threads on cooking with wine and using Vermouth >>>>>> prompted me to post this from Joe Yonan in today's >>>>>> Washington Post. >>>>>> >>>>>> Ask 10 cooks what they do with leftover wine and, trust >>>>>> me, at least half will respond, "What's leftover wine?" -- > >>>>>> James Silverton >>>>>> Potomac, Maryland >>>>>> >>>>>> Email, with obvious alterations: >>>>>> not.jim.silverton.at.verizon.not >>>>> If it's a fine wine you served with dinner cover it with a >>>>> nitrogen blanket and recork it. If properly done, it will >>>>> last for months. I usually refrigerate recorked wine, >>>>> though it's not absolutely necessary. Vermouth, or any >>>>> fortified wine like Port, or Sherry, will hold its own if >>>>> it's just recorked for quite a long time. I guess the >>>>> "today" wines, red and white, we all know what to do with. >>>>> >>>>> Ed >>>>> >>>> I can't say nitrogen protects wine for months, but it can >>>> extend wine for a few (very few compared to a month) days. As far as >>>> decent "today" wines... they are made to drink >>>> TODAY (whatta concept), not in five to twenty years. So if you or >>>> anyone else has a problem with that, you're the one >>>> with the *problem*. >>> >>> I kind of doubt that a small injection of nitrogen would do >>> even as much as a vacuum pump. Given that nitrogen is >>> slightly less dense than air, you'd probably have to bubble >>> nitrogen thro' your wine for quite a time to have much >>> effect. Now argon, being quite a bit denser, might work but >>> it's got to be more costly. Carbon dioxide would perhaps work >>> too but I'd think you would be able to taste it, unlike >>> nitrogen and argon. James Silverton Potomac, Maryland >>> >> We use a product called "Private Reserve". You spray the >> nitrogen blanket onto the >> remaining wine in the bottle, and immediately recork firmly. >> This will keep a wine >> from oxidizing for at least a month, and possibly longer. I >> have a fair store of very old >> Bordeaux and Burgundies, all very sensitive to any more >> oxidation that they've already >> had from aging, and I haven't had any problem. I don't think a >> vacuum pump applied to a half full >> bottle will remove enough oxygen, especially for a very old >> red wine. > > Now, I don't dispute that, if you could remove the air from above the wine > in a bottle you could well preserve the wine. However, how is it done? As > I said, I cannot see that nitrogen would displace the slightly heavier air > very quickly and it seems you would need a lot of USPC quality gas. > > There is a wine bottle attachment for food preserving vacuum pumps but > I've never tried it. > -- > The product I've always used is Private Preserve http://privatepreserve.com/welcome.htm It uses CO2, argon and nitrogen. I didn't know that. Thanks for bringing this up. Ed |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Freezing leftover wine? | General Cooking | |||
Leftover Ham | General Cooking | |||
The Soupification© of Leftover Scalloped Potatoes and Leftover Broccoli | General Cooking | |||
Crown Tops for Leftover Wine | Winemaking |