Orlando Sentinel

Trade in your Champagne flutes

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A small group of willing participan­ts — each of them a casual wine drinker with no formal training — tied cloth napkins around their heads to cover their eyes and promised to do their best to describe what they were about to smell.

I poured five sparkling wines into flutes, poured the same wines into regular glasses, and asked my guests for their impression­s of each. With their hands on the table and their nostrils hovering just above the glasses, they offered descriptiv­e words about two different Champagnes, a Cava, a bottle of English fizz and a California sparkler.

Pretty much across the board they picked the regular glass.

Or rather, their comments picked the regular glass. The words they used to describe the wines in the regular glasses were often more pleasant; they were also more abundant than the words they used to describe the wines in the flutes. They had more and better things to say about the wines in the regular glasses.

On top of that, the initial aromas wafting from the flutes vanished much earlier. The sniffers said things like “fading” and “weak” and “It’s like ... where’d it go?” when their noses were over the flutes, and things like “ocean,” “grapefruit,” “peach,” “anise,” “apple,” “strawberry” and “citrusy” when their noses were over the regular glasses.

The flutes did have one advantage, however. At times they gave off the impression of freshness. The sniffers could sense the wines’ effervesce­nce and brightness, and that is pretty much the main selling point of the wine flute — to highlight a sparkling wine’s sparkle. The idea is that the long, thin cylinder helps keep the bubbles bubbly. And looking pretty.

The flute was certainly an improvemen­t over the glass style that preceded it historical­ly: the wide and flat coupe. The glass that screams “Puttin’ on the Ritz.” You know the one. It looks kind of like a pudding dish on a stem, and when it’s full of bubbly, the best technique is to sort of cup it from underneath with your whole hand, to stabilize it.

I can’t think of any reason to use that kind of a glass for liquid unless you’re doing it at a costume party and you’re surrounded by flappers and guys dressed like the Monopoly Man.

Still, I also can’t think of much reason to drink from a flute, unless the aesthetics are important to you. The amped-up bubble action is fun, but to me it’s not worth cutting off your ability to swirl and sip with relative ease.

If my little experiment and the preference­s of scores of winemakers matter in your decisionma­king process, the clear choice is to pour bubbles into regular old wine glasses and give them a gentle swirl and sniff before you drink, much as you’d do with a still wine.

So if you’re still trying to come up with a New Year’s resolution, here you go: Quit the flute.

 ?? ABEL URIBE/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Pour your sparkling wine into a glass you’d use for still wine instead of a narrow flute, which keeps the aromas of the bubbly from escaping.
ABEL URIBE/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Pour your sparkling wine into a glass you’d use for still wine instead of a narrow flute, which keeps the aromas of the bubbly from escaping.
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