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nitrogen wine storage?
Not quite on topic, but close...
Went out to dinner last night, and asked for a glass of pinot grigio. It arrived looking as fizzy as champagne with a lump of sugar, and the explanation was that the restaurant used some sort of nitrogen-atmosphere storage system for opened bottles of wine. Drinking it, I could feel the fizziness on my tongue, and it tasted... well, not quite like vinegar, but close enough (no, I didn't take a second sip. It went back). Anybody know anything about this system? And does it normally work to preserve wine a while, or was my experience common? |
nitrogen wine storage?
"Joe Pfeiffer" > wrote in message ... > Not quite on topic, but close... > > Went out to dinner last night, and asked for a glass of pinot grigio. > It arrived looking as fizzy as champagne with a lump of sugar, and the > explanation was that the restaurant used some sort of > nitrogen-atmosphere storage system for opened bottles of wine. Drinking > it, I could feel the fizziness on my tongue, and it tasted... well, not > quite like vinegar, but close enough (no, I didn't take a second sip. > It went back). > > Anybody know anything about this system? And does it normally work to > preserve wine a while, or was my experience common? Sounds like someone either hit it with CO2 instead of nitrogen or managed to pressurize the wine with nitrogen. |
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