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-   -   Wine bottle openers (https://www.flyertalk.com/forum/diningbuzz/1161552-wine-bottle-openers.html)

Red '74 TR6 Apr 23, 2011 7:31 pm

Another vote for the Oster: http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...=ATVPDKIKX0DER Amazon had it today for $13.99 and it's normally $19 or so. You don't need to keep it in it's charger. Even if you use it every day, you'll only need to charge it once every two or three months.
I work at a winery and there I use a double-jointed corkscrew something like this: http://www.amazon.com/Pulltap-Double...3608599&sr=1-1

slawecki Apr 24, 2011 7:13 am


Originally Posted by RK7 (Post 16269609)
Another vote for the Oster: http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...=ATVPDKIKX0DER Amazon had it today for $13.99 and it's normally $19 or so. You don't need to keep it in it's charger. Even if you use it every day, you'll only need to charge it once every two or three months.
I work at a winery and there I use a double-jointed corkscrew something like this: http://www.amazon.com/Pulltap-Double...3608599&sr=1-1

i have 7 Osters. wife bought them for me and for presents from sams/costco. the screw is very thin. they will not pull older corks that tend to stick. if the cork is a bid dry, parts of the cork are broken off and get up in the works. the corkscrew will not work then. i could take apart the corkscrew i bought at aldi's, but it died after a year(probably 1500-2000 bottles).

we are on oster #4. sam/costo take them back. we do not give them as presents. i presume oster is dumping them.

prncess674 Apr 24, 2011 11:46 am


Originally Posted by Paul79UF (Post 15480847)
I have a really old version of this one -
It says "Italy" on it and has been in my family for years. I never liked those waiter type ones that you have to yank out the cork.

If you are yanking on the cork, then you probably have no idea how to use it properly. When used properly the cork should come out easily without need of brute strength.

Since most waiter's two step have a built in blade, I found this cool corkscrew with built in foil cutter. It is always in my rollaboard.:D
https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/_c.../corkscrew.jpg

ECOTONE May 3, 2011 1:12 pm


Originally Posted by jakuda (Post 15530541)
ah-so only for me.

+1

used to use a rabbit, but it just tore apart older corks. the Durand is also a nice, albeit expensive option for collectors.

cordelli Dec 27, 2011 7:33 am

YMMV like everything else at the Christmas Tree Shops

Yesterday the Orange CT store had the Ekco two prong cork puller

http://img39.imageshack.us/img39/2756/corke.jpg

for twenty nine cents. If you buy four or more of them they rang up at four for a dollar. Not the best looking or most expensive, but for that price, there's no reason not to have one around should you ever need it.

Shockingly, the store was totally empty yesterday, don't understand that at all unless they cleaned it out in the morning and the shoppers all moved on.

DJGMaster1 Dec 27, 2011 9:56 am

Personally, I find that a good ole Screwpull and an Ah-So (the one with 2 prongs) - the one I use depends upon the cork, generally get the job done better than anything else.

I have a Rabbit, but I find the Screwpull is better, because it removes the cork more slowly and gently than the lever action of the Rabitt enables.

The Ah-So (especially one with a plastic handle) has the advantage of going through airport security without a hitch in a carry-on, whereas I have had problems with others having a helix.

If I lived near where Cordelli was, I'd pick up 4 of those Ecko Ah-So units for a buck in a New York minute.

Gaucho100K Dec 27, 2011 11:04 am

Im a Rabbit fan myself...... ^

I also have fun with the gas operated models from Cork-pops.... :D

chillinthemost Dec 27, 2011 3:13 pm


Originally Posted by lancebanyon (Post 15476146)
We're a two bottles a night house (wine) and I think we have tried every type of opener there is, most of them given to us as gifts. It seems like all the newer, creative openers we've tried break after limited use so now we're back to the tried and true - simple twist and pull. What does everybody else use?

We've gone through 3 rabbits in about 3 years. Our current one has lasted nearly two years. The key with the rabbit apparently is that you should only use them on natural corks.
We have a fully automated brookstone one, but it annoys me, so I don't use it often. It was given as a give.
The traditional screw darn with the arms popping out the sides works well for me.

Eastbay1K Dec 27, 2011 5:01 pm

I believe that the sommelier is the proper wine bottle opener.

number_6 Dec 27, 2011 5:24 pm


Originally Posted by Eastbay1K (Post 17700550)
I believe that the sommelier is the proper wine bottle opener.

That only works for BYO, as my cellar is better stocked to my taste than 99.99% of restaurants having sommeliers :)

Most truly high-end restaurants (the Michelin 3 star kind) are thrilled to have you BYO if what you bring really is something that they don't have (but wished they did).

chillinthemost Dec 27, 2011 5:53 pm


Originally Posted by number_6 (Post 17700651)
That only works for BYO, as my cellar is better stocked to my taste than 99.99% of restaurants having sommeliers :)

Most truly high-end restaurants (the Michelin 3 star kind) are thrilled to have you BYO if what you bring really is something that they don't have (but wished they did).

OK, that begs the question. Give me your top 5 drinking (not collecting) wines in your cellar?

DJGMaster1 Dec 28, 2011 12:05 am


Originally Posted by number_6 (Post 17700651)
That only works for BYO, as my cellar is better stocked to my taste than 99.99% of restaurants having sommeliers :)

Most truly high-end restaurants (the Michelin 3 star kind) are thrilled to have you BYO if what you bring really is something that they don't have (but wished they did).

I'm in the same boat.

Presently, I have a raft of top tier Cal Cabs from the '84-87, '91, and '94 vintages that are drinking beautifully. And to think I paid under $30 a bottle for most of them, stuff like Beringer Reserve, Diamond Creek all 4 vineyards, Dominus, Montelena Estate, Mondavi Reserve, Dunn Howell Mtn, Forman, etc.

Also a very good selection of '82, '85, '86, '89, and '90 Classified Growth Bordeaux, mainly Super Seconds like the Leovilles, the Pichons, Ducru, Cos D'Estournel, L'Angelus, etc.

Given how the prices of these wines have escalated in more recent vintages, I shifted my buying to Oz, Spain, Argentina and Chile, but I still have hundreds of bottles of first tier Cab-based wines from the '80s and early '90s.

I have yet to meet a sommellier who would object to a BYO with fair corkage of this class of wine - especially if one offered them a taste.

chillinthemost Dec 28, 2011 7:46 am


Originally Posted by DJGMaster1 (Post 17702139)
I'm in the same boat.

Presently, I have a raft of top tier Cal Cabs from the '84-87, '91, and '94 vintages that are drinking beautifully. And to think I paid under $30 a bottle for most of them, stuff like Beringer Reserve, Diamond Creek all 4 vineyards, Dominus, Montelena Estate, Mondavi Reserve, Dunn Howell Mtn, Forman, etc.

Also a very good selection of '82, '85, '86, '89, and '90 Classified Growth Bordeaux, mainly Super Seconds like the Leovilles, the Pichons, Ducru, Cos D'Estournel, L'Angelus, etc.

Given how the prices of these wines have escalated in more recent vintages, I shifted my buying to Oz, Spain, Argentina and Chile, but I still have hundreds of bottles of first tier Cab-based wines from the '80s and early '90s.

I have yet to meet a sommellier who would object to a BYO with fair corkage of this class of wine - especially if one offered them a taste.

Wow, that's quite the impressive collection!
I'd love to pick your brain on what you're buying from Oz, Spain, Argentina and Chile. Mind if I send you a PM?

DJGMaster1 Dec 28, 2011 9:26 am


Originally Posted by chillinthemost (Post 17703345)
Wow, that's quite the impressive collection!
I'd love to pick your brain on what you're buying from Oz, Spain, Argentina and Chile. Mind if I send you a PM?

Feel free.

MikeFromTokyo Jan 1, 2012 9:23 am


Originally Posted by Jack Napier (Post 15662731)
As I mentioned, this is an example with a massive core, that could pobbilby rip a delicate cork apart.

This is the kind of helix I'd recommend

This is an excellent illustration, I totally agree. A corkscrew should not have a core, but should have a helix such as the one pictured.

I use what I suppose is a "waiter's friend" type bottle opener from Laguiole en Aubrac.

dchristiva Jan 3, 2012 9:07 am


Originally Posted by MikeFromTokyo (Post 17725739)
This is an excellent illustration, I totally agree. A corkscrew should not have a core, but should have a helix such as the one pictured.

I use what I suppose is a "waiter's friend" type bottle opener from Laguiole en Aubrac.

Same here. I've used the rabbit-type openers with success, but really find that the "waiter's friend" does the job just as well.

panyafe Jan 29, 2012 2:49 pm

Buy the classic Pulltex wine opener. Trust me, you will not regret it.

particlemn Feb 2, 2012 4:30 pm


Originally Posted by panyafe (Post 17910510)
Buy the classic Pulltex wine opener. Trust me, you will not regret it.

i bought one 4 months ago andt hink its the absolute best, they use a tephlon coating or something on the screw, not just black paint like some others (trader joes $1.99 opener i'm looking at you) and the ease that it goes into the cork is amazing, the two notch lever operates much better than the waitersfriend, i know they look exactly alike but when you look at the "feet" that touch the top of the bottle these have a different shape and work perfectly.

scubadiver Feb 3, 2012 12:02 pm

After 1 year of having an electric corkscrew...
 
I have to report back. It is a great labor-saving device. It is so much fun to use that me bride opens the wine herself instead of handing it to me.


Saves my labor, anyway.:p


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