The company RIEDEL is a family owned, 300 year-old crystal company known to be the inventor of varietal-specific steamware. Riedel is the first company in history to recognize that the taste of a beverage is affected by the shape of the vessel from which it is consumed, and has been recognized for its revolutionary designs which complement primarily alcoholic beverages. Enter the world of Riedel! Visit us at www.Riedel.com.
when i was in my intership, they used to have riedel glassware. i always break the happy o many times and when i went home, i cried because i know i cant afford it,, because my bos and my senior were told me happy o is not longer to be produced huhu
Daumen runter wenn man es nicht schafft bei all der Mühe nen Ton Check zu machen. Sowas kann man nicht online stellen sondern sollte man überarbeiten oder neu aufnehmen.😀
Vielen Dank für dein Feedback! Da es sich um eine Live-Aufzeichnung handelt, ist eine nachträgliche Änderung leider nicht möglich. Wir werden jedoch das Anliegen bei zukünftigen Videos berücksichtigen.
Exactly what I was searching for, the thinness of Veloce series with the classic shapes. They really feel as thin as hand-made Zaltos whose shapes I don't prefer.
Hello, you can order the glasses via our online store www.riedel.com or contact the distributor: DAE YOO LIFE CO.LTD810, Donghwa Bldg., 71 Yeouinaru-ro, Yeongdeungpo-gu, Seoul, 07327, +82 2 7863136 Cheers!
Distinctions exist between the series. The RIEDEL Veloce collection stands out as one of our thinnest and lightest lines, featuring diamond-shaped glasses tailored for various grape varieties. In contrast, the GRAPE@RIEDEL series offers a slightly sturdier option, characterized by its flat-bottomed design. This series comprises only three grape variety-specific glasses, which can also serve versatile purposes including cocktails.
Mr Ridel, you have a chanel in spanish? My father, Rafael Ramos, and I are in Mexico City. He knew your dear Father in a tasting in Mexico (in Club del Gourmet testing) many years ago. He loves with passion ridels cups, but he dont speack english and he can't see this sessions. He is 90 years old (almost 91 next month). Ridel have many fans in Mexico. I hope Ridel Company think in the Mexican public, like my dad. 😊 Blessings.
Here you can find a video of Maximilian J. Riedel cleaning the Amadeo decanter. The cleaning instructions are almost identical to those for the Mamba decanter: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-SKSQ8K1d9lY.html
Amazing presentation, Mr. Maximilian! Gradually I'm learning about Riedel multi century company. Love your energy and happiness showing Riedel products for us. May 2024 be a blessed, happy and prosperous year for us all! Kind regards from Brazil! (Here in Brazil we - the country, not me - have a great glass company named Nadir.)
How do you wash the microfiber cloth? The Riedel web site offers two conflicting instructions. One page says the water should be "at least 170F", the other page says, "maximum of 90F".
Dear Mr. Riedel, how is it possible to make the Mamba decanter dry best after cleaning with hot water? I thank you immediately for your prompt response and congratulations on your excellent products manufactured by your family dynasty. Greetings from Switzerland.
So nice - until he gets to R8 as the glass denomination. There is no Cabernet Sauvignon, it's what wine freaks have always treasured as their Grand Cru Bordeaux Glasses by Riedel. And you can pry the eight ones I have from my dead, cold hands. Thank you for giving the base a different laser engraving. It still pleases me to send people the video of handmade stemware of that opulence and precision. This is where even mediocre wines can shine. And congratulations on going to the future with actual machine manufacturing so those beauties are now available to a wider audience.
As you say, aroma is crucial for the enjoyment of any wine. As such, it is essential that your wine glass is designed to carry those aromas to your NOSE, along with any other tasks such as keeping a chilled wine cool or warming a brandy or, in champagne, controlling those bubbles. Unfortunately, most champagne Flutes do not have a large enough throat to poke your nose into and, as you get to drinking the final 1/3rd, you'll probably need to be a contortionist in order to tilt your head back far enough. This is a major design fail, where form didn't follow function. Totally agree your recommendation to choose a glass that's been designed for the grape variety. 👏
Bordeaux wines are often made with an high percentage of Cabernet. Even for an 100% Cabernet Sauvignon Wine the Bordeaux glas is the right choice. So Mr. Riedel is right: R8 is the Cabernet Sauvignon Glas also called Bordeaux Glas…
@@Wine_guy93That´s correct! The only small clarification is that the glass is correctly named Bordeaux Grand Cru, not Cabernet as initially mentioned. Both Bordeaux and Cabernet wines are perfectly enjoyed from the RIEDEL Superleggero Bordeaux Grand Cru glass. Cheers to clarity and the pleasure of fine wine!
First of all, a huge congratulations on this achievement! Learning the details and story behind this project made me, even more, appreciative. Also, learning that handmade glasses will eventually die down is somewhat breathtaking.
Hallo, an sich gut gemachtes Video aber die Ton Qualität der beiden zu geschalteten Herren ist grauenhaft....konterkariert leider ein wenig die Qualität die einem hier vermittelt werden soll.
wenn ich meinen Decanter über Nacht mit (dem hier sehr harten) Leitungswasser stehen lasse, habe ich Kalkränder, die ohne aggressive Mittel wie Zitronensäure nicht mehr zu entfernen sind....
Ok? So what's the stemless glass??? What's the ounces it holds??? All I saw was a foreign dude talking about drinking coke, and juice out of a glass??? What am I looking at????
It's quite impressive! How often can the glass be recycled to produce new glasses? Let's say a set of 15 glasses breaks. Can you recycle that glass to make 15 brand new glasses?
I can agree with the aromas and thus the shape of the glass being important. There is also the feeling of drinking from a nice glass. Properties that are important to wine for sure. But what I struggle with is the claim that when the wine is in your mouth it changes so much, because the instance Riedel takes a sip, he also swirls the wine in his mouth as he says "to cover the whole palette". So all in all it makes sense that a glass is important for the _experience_ but the claim regarding taste is a bit strange. I'd speculate it's more about smell, i.e. tasting and smelling the wine from different glasses that makes the biggest difference.
I truly wonder if we have a common ancestor. My grandfather was a Riedel whose oldest ancestor I found named Lorenz Riedel, who was the father of Adam Riedel (which I only mention because Lorenz was such a common name but Adam was not a common name) from Jelení (formerly Wockendorf) in mid to late1600s. My grandfather’s ancestors migrated to Nova Ves (Neudorf) and then by late 1800s early 1900s to Tyrol. My grandfather was born in Wörgl and eventually immigrated to Canada. He passed away last year.