Washing With Wine?
Aren’t there also specific wines which fit certain uses better than all other types do? Indeed there are! For example, the one wine to sip while puffing a fragrant Havana cigar is red Port. If it had not been for the time-honored British custom of after-dinner Port for the gentlemen, while the ladies retired from the table, the Portuguese Port industry would not be what it is today.
While history fails to record the specific wine type with which ladies of Elizabethan times bathed their faces to improve their complexions, we do know that Anna Held’s legendary wine bath could only have been had in Champagne. Perhaps they washed with a fine Chardonnay or Pinot Blanc (http://www.wineaccess.com/wine/grape/Pinot%20Blanc/)?
And Lucien B. Johnson, the champion wine salesman of the years immediately preceding prohibition, always insisted that the wine with which to woo a lady is not Champagne. “Champagne only makes folks talkative,” Lucien used to say, “but Burgundy, warmed to the temperature of the room, makes people affectionate. Yes, Burgundy is the only love wine!”
You cannot marry off your daughter respectably these days without serving Champagne at the reception. It is usually suggested to the bride’s parents that they buy the least expensive kind, because the caterers always hide the labels with napkins, anyway. This also applies to ship launchings, where the Champagne is wasted.
At the Jewish holiday feasts the wine that flows must be Kosher I’Pesach, but fortunately the rabbis’ hechsher seals are placed on a complete variety of wine types, so that the celebrants do have a choice.
For the sick, the oftenest-prescribed wine seems to be Port, which is also the base for some of the proprietary medicines sold in drugstores, including some of the old-time favorite tonics. This type again gets the call in the pleasant custom of laying down a bottle of wine when a child is born, to age until his twenty-first birthday.
And completing the round of the clock, Port is also the favorite nightcap wine, because of its ability to induce a pleasant night’s sleep. But wait! How about morning wines? It would be a grave omission indeed to skip Champagne breakfasts and Sunday brunches. For the former, serve a choice of white and pink Champagnes. For the latter, although Rhine wines and Champagne are both popular, the dash of color that Rose adds is delightful.
And speaking of wine in the morning, there was once a famous connoisseur who always began the day by brushing his teeth with Viognier (http://www.wineaccess.com/wine/grape/Viognier/). Although it may seem to defeat the purpose of brushing your teeth by brushing them with white wine, to a wine lover, it is the perfect toothpaste and mouthwash.
Banish any fear that you might serve a wrong kind of wine-unless you happen to be completely taste blind. Do you need a chart to tell you not to serve candy with steak? Of course not! Likewise you need no detailed instructions to suggest one of the sweet wines with a sweet dessert. You certainly would not serve dry, tart Claret with your crepes suzette-not if you have ever tasted Claret, that is.
Sarah Martin
http://www.articlesbase.com/food-and-beverage-articles/washing-with-wine-671189.html
What is the best way to avoid water spots when hand washing a crystal wine glass?
Dry the glass right away.
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Use hot soapy water, rinse well and dry with a lint free towel while still hot.
Smart people know to never let crystal touch the bottom of the sink!
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I have found the best way to dry crystal wine glasses without any spots is to first shake off the excess water, then use a "mircofiber" cloth. They are used on camera lenses and eyeglasses to clean them. They work great on crystal.
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Try rinsing with hot water and then place upside down on a Cotton towel, that should work because I had the same problem!
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if you have spots- Use a cloth dampened with vinegar
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Rinse very thoroughly in hot water and immediately dry with a soft cloth or paper towel.
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Hand washing is the best but then rinse (hot water) thoroughly, I mean thoroughly and then hang the wine glass so that excess water runs off.
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Wash and dry the stemware as normal. Before storing, run very hot tap water in the sink. Hold the wine glass upside down over the water to fog it up a little. Wipe off the steam with a soft, lint free cloth.
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An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure so . . .Rinse the glass in as hot of water as you can stand and/or try to dry them immediately. In your home, it is easy to dry them by hand to avoid spots. In a bar however where you go through a lot of wine glasses you use a good rinse agent in the water, then after they air dry, you use a cotton terry cloth and "polish" them before hanging them in the rack.
If the stains are stubborn, run a pitcher of hot water and hold the wine glass inverted over the water so that the steam fogs up the glass, then polish with a dry cloth.
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Country Club Bartending.