Тёмный

Does SIZE Matter? Blind Tasting Champagne from Mini to Double-Magnum Bottle. 

Konstantin Baum - Master of Wine
Подписаться 161 тыс.
Просмотров 71 тыс.
50% 1

Does the size of the bottle change the flavor of wine? I needed to know and therefore blind-tasted the same Champagne from five bottles, ranging from the 200ml to the 3,000ml format.
Support me on my PATREON: / konstantinbaum
Follow me on ...:
/ konstantinbaum_mw
Check out my website:
baumselection....
I use this wine key: Laguiole en Aubrac Wine Key Ebony
I have used this glass in this Video: RIEDEL Veritas Champagne
I have tasted the following wines in this Video:
NV Moet & Chandon Brut Imperial (0.2l, 0.375l, 0.75l, 1,5l, 3l):
www.wine-searc...
The 100 Point Scoring System (from www.robertparker.com):
96-100: An extraordinary wine of profound and complex character displaying all the attributes expected of a classic wine of its variety. Wines of this caliber are worth a special effort to find, purchase and consume.
90 - 95: An outstanding wine of exceptional complexity and character. In short, these are terrific wines.
80 - 89: A barely above average to very good wine displaying various degrees of finesse and flavor as well as character with no noticeable flaws.
70 - 79: An average wine with little distinction except that it is soundly made. In essence, a straightforward, innocuous wine.
60 - 69: A below-average wine containing noticeable deficiencies, such as excessive acidity and/or tannin, an absence of flavor or possibly dirty aromas or flavors.
50 - 59: A wine deemed to be unacceptable.
Bottles are more important than people might think. Without the glass bottle, wine would have never developed the way it did. Before glass-making techniques advanced to the point that glass bottles could be produced in bulk wines were generally transported and stored in barrels, amphoras, and skins.
Only when the bottle was introduced at a larger scale could wine develop slowly in a glass bottle without going bad. One wine style that did not exist before the bottle was sparkling wine. The point of sparkling wine is … well, that it sparkles and the CO2 would escape in all other vessels but the inert bottle.
For Champagne and wines made in a similar way, the bottle is even more important as the bottle also serves as the fermentation vessel for the second fermentation, the one that turns a simple sour and light base wine into sparkling wine. Champagne bottles, therefore, need to be thicker and stronger to withstand the pressure in the bottle, which can be way higher than the pressure of a tire for example.
Sparkling wines also have deeper punts as this is a way to make the bottle stronger as you increase the surface area of the glass. The Champagneois do love their bottles and they come in all shapes and sizes and they were very creative when it comes to naming their bottles. Most people know the half bottle, Standard bottle, and Magnum but for Champagne, the Quarter bottle, containing 20cl, is also widely used.
The bigger bottles carry names like Jeroboam, Balthazar, and Salomon, taken from the bible. Some of them were kings but it is not true for all of them as some sources suggest and no one really knows why these names were picked. There are a lot of discussions when it comes to the ideal bottle size. Most producers and experts agree that the same Champagne fermented and aged in different bottle sizes tastes different. This is mainly explained by the fact that larger-volume bottles contain a smaller volume of oxygen and have a smaller exposure to oxygen during disgorgement relative to their size.
On top of that it has been found that the amount of oxygen included in the cork - for example identical for a normal bottle and a magnum- has less impact on the wine for larger bottle sizes. You can also add that external factors such as light and temperature have less impact on a large format bottle than a smaller one and that the fermentation in larger bottles generally takes longer and produces more complex wines.
Most Champagne producers seem to recommend Magnum bottles over smaller formats BUT do they just want to sell more Champagne or is this good advice?
I have 5 bottles of the same Champagne here: the Quarter, the half bottle the standard bottle, the Magnum, and the 3 Liter Jeroboam and I am going to blind taste them to find out which one I prefer.

Опубликовано:

 

26 авг 2024

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 247   
@feelinggrape
@feelinggrape Год назад
To me the main reason for differences in super large bottles is actually, that the standard and magnum bottles are closed automatically while the super large ones are often closed by hand. Makes a big difference while disgorging. Often, winemakers carefully select their best (but sometimes in case of Bordeaux most tannic) wines for the biggest bottles, because they represent something and are often stored for longer.
@fredericperrin3279
@fredericperrin3279 Год назад
Fantastic Konstantin! Message is clear. Now I can convince my wife that I should buy the 3L bottle instead of my usual half bottle.
@eric1richards
@eric1richards Год назад
As a wine rep I won a Nebuchadnezzer of Piper Heidseick. I opened it at my wedding for 120 people. My friend Mat Dinsmore, sabered the bottle for us. We left the bottle standing on the bar and poured glasses using a clear silicone hose. We did not finish the bottle…. Keeping in mind there was 120 of us. I love large format bottles.
@sonarsphere
@sonarsphere Год назад
15 liters for 120 people is not that much (125ml per person). I assume not everyone could drink champagne?
@eric1richards
@eric1richards Год назад
@@sonarsphere There were kids in the crowd. Plus we had some other choice wines from my portfolio. I know each guest had a 2-3oz pour for the toast. Then I did my best to finish it. We were gifted 3 bottles of Piper Heidseick rare 1988 for the big day, so it was tough to ignore those...
@porkchopsammies79
@porkchopsammies79 Год назад
Nebuchadnezzar should feed 30 people. must've been a lame party 😂 I jest of course. grats on winning and marriage.
@apexxxx10
@apexxxx10 Год назад
@@sonarsphere *ml (Metric) rules: Fuck Oz, Gallon and LBS (Lot of Bullshit)*
@AchillesMajor
@AchillesMajor 3 месяца назад
Congrats on your Utah wedding! (lol)😉
@brandontrueblood3584
@brandontrueblood3584 Год назад
I don’t even care for wines or champagne but somehow find myself spending hours watching you talk about them and almost wish I liked it more.
@Ornette14
@Ornette14 Год назад
Did you check the disgorgement codes on each bottle? Bottle ageing of champagne can make a lot of difference.
@smolderingjay3360
@smolderingjay3360 Год назад
Spot on sir!
@user-eh6hb8eh6t
@user-eh6hb8eh6t Год назад
How we can check it ?
@Ornette14
@Ornette14 Год назад
@@user-eh6hb8eh6t Google champagne codes - plenty of advice.
@sypialnia_studio
@sypialnia_studio Год назад
Yup, was waiting for this. Unfortunately Moet doesn't include disgorgement date on the bottles, unlike more 'artisanal' producers.
@kutchinka4062
@kutchinka4062 Год назад
My thoughts as well....
@DeepPurpleIsTheBest
@DeepPurpleIsTheBest Год назад
Great video, glad to see a true professional back up my personal experience. Was never blind, but the most noteworthy experience with this for me was with Pol Roger Champagne. I worked for a retailer in Switzerland that had this as their "house" champagne, so we regularly had the 75cl bottle open for tasting. On Christmas I would regularly have the 150cl and sometimes the 300cl bottle and they were always clearly superior. Somehow creamier with much more distinctive autolytic notes and finer pérlage. Gotta love big format wines!
@appetiteencourage9611
@appetiteencourage9611 Год назад
I’m quite sure that there would be a difference by capacity. However there are bottle variations and even non vintage champagnes have different degorgement dates, so those factors might have matter too. I tried two same bottles of non vintage champagne from the same case in a row and they were quite different in aroma intensity and richness in palate. One was quite better than the other one. Thanks for always introducing an interesting video and cheers! 🍾
@charliep9066
@charliep9066 Год назад
My best guess at why it's called a 1/4 bottle is because the bottle is 200mL and approximately 1/4 of a 750mL bottle. It could also be because one bottle is typically 4 servings, and the bottle it considered 1 (heftier) serving?
@davidbatten5808
@davidbatten5808 Год назад
I have in front of me two 'quarter bottles' - both same size bottles, one a Lanson 20cl - the other a Tattinger 187.5ml according to Drinkstuff could also be called a Piccolo, Pony, Snipe or Split. As noted 187.5ml is exactly a quarter of a 750ml bot. Great video!
@jackpritchard9563
@jackpritchard9563 Год назад
great video, comepletely agree with your thoughts. Was fortunate enpugh to taste Bollinger RD 2008 out of 3 different formats; 75cl was very developed, magnum was perfect and 3L was very tight and saline (needs a few more years).
@jacob9540
@jacob9540 Год назад
Would be interesting to do this same comparison with all aged wine, as it would then be clear how the larger formats are fresher and showing less age
@robertlucic7598
@robertlucic7598 Год назад
We’ll be right over with some friends. Always a fan of mushrooms or truffles with champagne. Toasts with foie gras are always a good option
@hedinne
@hedinne Год назад
Do you know if the bottles were disgorge around the same time? I would guess that age would be more of a factor than the bottle size.
@Birdylockso
@Birdylockso Год назад
Very interesting learning experience! Thanks for exploring the issues that we often wonder about. The only question would be if they came from the same batch, or in a similar disgorgement time frame.
@noahcap
@noahcap Год назад
Great video, and what a cool idea for a tasting. I've never heard of a "quarter bottle"- here in the US we have small bottles called a "split" that holds 187mL. So very similar. I am not 100% sure, but I thought that the standard in Champagne is for secondary fermentation to happen in half bottles, standard bottles, and magnums. Splits (or quarter bottles) and anything larger than a magnum were filled up after secondary fermentation. So it makes sense that the smallest bottle actually outperformed the half. The 3L coming out first was a surprise! Perhaps something to do with the bottle aging? Do you know how long ago these were disgorged?
@gucioprawda1976
@gucioprawda1976 Год назад
That's quarter bottle! It's 1/4 of 750ml
@perrya.3580
@perrya.3580 Год назад
This is interesting, but is it a controlled experiment? They're all NVs, but disgorgement dates may differ, and I would imagine that magnums and jeroboams stay on shelves longer, meaning they have older disgorgement dates and develop more tertiary characteristics.
@bver1149
@bver1149 Год назад
Outstanding commentary. Blessings from nz, Simon in Hawkes Bay ♡
@NeilSnapePhotography
@NeilSnapePhotography 8 месяцев назад
Most small producers do a very limited number of Jeroboams. Being so they are always done by hand, riddled, disgorged etc. I have no idea if that makes a difference. I see Jeroboams of Vintage M&C in their Epernay cellars but all Imperial Brut as far as I know is done at Mont Aigu. A good question to ask next time there. Glad you posted this video, I've always been curious if it is true or myth that Magnums are better than standard bottles.
@winterB92
@winterB92 Год назад
Take it to a local sports club or day and everyone can celebrate or commiserate Wine is a social thing :)
@gevisu
@gevisu Год назад
🙌
@mcwine18
@mcwine18 Год назад
Damn, Konstantin must lift 💪🏻 You handled the biggest bottle with ease LOL 🫡
@TonyAlmeida610
@TonyAlmeida610 Год назад
In France, when you order a small bottle of water you can say "un quart Vittel" for example, maybe that expression migrated from water to champagne bottles?
@tobiasliebstvonobelitz6554
@tobiasliebstvonobelitz6554 Год назад
I think a big thing you missed out on why you want a bigger bottle of wine is that everyone at the table is guaranteed the same tasting experience, this obviously only goes for bigger parties, but it still stands. Also would have liked you using a proper vintaged wine from a singular vineyard compared to Moet who mixes from a very wide variety of fields.
@VintageVibes__
@VintageVibes__ Год назад
Many thanks for the great video! Can we rule out differences in the base wines? I understand that most Champagnes like Moet are comprised of differente vintages by default in order to ensure similar taste across years. However, the composition of different vintages might still lead to differences when compared 1:1 - i.e. the super large bottle might be filled with a different mix of vintages and threfore have a different taste. Love your channel!
@bonwatcher
@bonwatcher Год назад
Interesting tasting! I thought the magnum would win the day since that's what the experts choose. Family and friends always love the magnum and the non-oenophiles think it's such a huge bottle. I guess I will have to get a Jeroboam of Champagne to knock some socks off with size and taste. 🙂
@Alexander_Tronstad
@Alexander_Tronstad Год назад
I hear people always mentioning it has to do with the amount of oxygen in the bottle being distributed, but I'd guess the pressure from the weight, compressing more of the gas and liquid, and the resistance to quick temperature-change would have an effect too? It will pretty much stay more stable I guess.
@geirmyrvagnes8718
@geirmyrvagnes8718 Год назад
Napkin physics: Most of the pressure comes from the carbonation itself (about 3-6 bar for sparkling wines). Compared to that, the effect of the pressure from the depth of liquid in a big bottle lying on its side (about 0.02 bar) would be small.
@Neurability
@Neurability Год назад
I have no experience with different bottle sizes and this tasting was very interesting.
@felixra1185
@felixra1185 Год назад
This was truly a fantastic video, great experiment. I wonder if you could take this to the next level and do this with vintage champagne to see if the results are the same. In any event, keep up the good work Konstantin!
@AlanYMartin
@AlanYMartin Год назад
Konstantin, always have people on hand to help drink up leftovers, I find it really to finish "spare" wine this way!
@appetiteencourage9611
@appetiteencourage9611 Год назад
For the question of the day, you might air tight those bottles using similar items to coravin or vacuvin and put them on a stable low temperature place for more than two weeks. They would change to a quite interesting regional white wine that you might test. The second option is giving a try of bathing like Marilyn Monroe.. you might need more or just a short shower of champagne could give a similar experience. CAUTION! I tried the first option with Pol Roger, but I never tried the second option yet..
@apexxxx10
@apexxxx10 Год назад
Champagne J’adore! ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-GoNtfdFwZkQ.html
@garyedwards1150
@garyedwards1150 Год назад
Champagne sorbet! My wife got me an amazing ice cream maker for my birthday and one of my favourite things to make is champagne sorbet.
@leonaroberts7989
@leonaroberts7989 3 месяца назад
Recipe please!
@garyedwards1150
@garyedwards1150 3 месяца назад
@leonaroberts7989 250g golden caster sugar, 300ml champagne, 300ml water, 2 lemons. Put sugar and water in a pan, slowly bring to the boil while constantly stirring until the sugar dissolves. Allow to simmer for 10 minutes. Sit to cool. Once cool add champagne and lemon juice. Give a quick stir and then pour into the ice cream maker on sorbet setting. We found Laurent Perrier rosé gives the best results. Dont be tempted to swap for prosecco or cava as it will be too sweet. Enjoy!
@barnibizer
@barnibizer Год назад
Great vid as always mate! Keep em coming!
@SteelyTheVan
@SteelyTheVan Год назад
Another excellent review! Ah Konstantin, what do you in-fact do with all of the bottles that you open in your many tastings? Your friend circle must be growing!
@blurlur6150
@blurlur6150 Год назад
@Konstantin Baum I think there was a slight mistake made during the video. At 5:46 he pours the first cup from what seems to be the half-bottle into the first cup, but at 5:52 he picks up the cup with 'H' written beneath. But we see at 5:54 that the bottle used to pour the first cup is hidden at the back, which is the half bottle. So the results are actually, smallest bottle is the worst, largest bottle is the best.
@lutomson3496
@lutomson3496 Год назад
I go to the Chandon winery in Napa every month and belong to the wine club there next time Im going to taste test the difference in sized bottles also, great video
@Natashaz48
@Natashaz48 Год назад
So much diversity. Love this in depth tasting. Feminine/yin is definitely a good descriptor 🎉
@themodernman7825
@themodernman7825 Год назад
This was a great test, so interesting. One of the hardest things to do when making alcohol is consistency. Shows even great producers can have slight differences.
@jeffgroup9025
@jeffgroup9025 Год назад
I always noticed it. Smaller bottles like in planes or some events were always harsh versus bigger bottles
@aominedaiki3112
@aominedaiki3112 Год назад
funny enough i was having dilemma this evening and then boom this pops up
@comesahorseman
@comesahorseman Год назад
Interesting! Also, not unexpected. 👍 Happy Easter 🌷
@akseldp6028
@akseldp6028 Год назад
My experience with big bottels is good. They are always very exciting. However, I also believe that there is great potential in small bottles, in addition to being easier to finish. They can also make the wine develop faster 🤩
@James-ez8vt
@James-ez8vt Год назад
Love the Review was always curious as to what results would be 🥂
@holymackenaw
@holymackenaw Год назад
I think in Austria we call the quater bottle Piccolo.
@daniellamonteiro
@daniellamonteiro Год назад
Invite us all for a glass 😊
@jcaff6963
@jcaff6963 Год назад
Drink it, preferably with family and friends, but drink it. One other consideration--were all these bottles from the same lot? Producers have been reluctant to label their bottles with enough information to make a decision about when the disgorgement was done. Also a consideration for drinkers in the US, transportation and storage conditions can definitely effect the wine. There have been bottles I've had that were given high scores, but I found just OK. Was that because of storage conditions? Maybe. Others got middling scores, but impressed me. Thanks for the video.
@drmatthewhorkey
@drmatthewhorkey Год назад
Great video and idea KB! Although I’m yet to taste an ‘extraordinary’ bottle of MC champagne ha ha ha
@larrydunn4626
@larrydunn4626 Год назад
another factor is temperature variation -- in Moet cellar, in transport, in retailer, and in home cellar. Then glass/wine ratio is much higher in the smaller bottles, less in the larger, so the smaller the bottle, the quicker it changes to match exterior temperature. Perhaps more changes in temperature hurt smaller bottles, help larger bottles... though that does not explain the 1/4 bottle being better than the half bottole.
@John-sg9fz
@John-sg9fz Год назад
Awesome video. Agree with your observations on bottle size
@liamblake937
@liamblake937 Год назад
Wow, great video, I thought that for sure there would be no difference, illuminating! My dad buys nice Bordeaux by the magnum so he doesn't get tempted to open it until a special occasion.
@apexxxx10
@apexxxx10 Год назад
What’s your dad’s profession? ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-GoNtfdFwZkQ.html
@kentpiano2600
@kentpiano2600 Год назад
Cook your excess champers in with scallops or mussels mmmm😊
@electronblue8334
@electronblue8334 Год назад
Yes, mussels with white wine is a traditional recipe, why not use champagne? Good thinking!
@reibelswinelist
@reibelswinelist Год назад
Huh very interesting - thanks for this 🙏
@guysankey2980
@guysankey2980 2 месяца назад
I am a great fan of Moët, what would help would be a decipherable release date. That would make the test even more fair. I bought 2 bottles over Christmas and although the wines were remarkably similar the labels were quite different, this set me in the hunt for release dates which I neve4 resolved.
@peterburlin8198
@peterburlin8198 Год назад
Interesting! Though I’d wager the differences have more to do with other factors than bottle size in this mass produced N.V. wine. If I plan to serve champagne to many people I’ll make sure to get the big bottles though!
@eric4946
@eric4946 6 месяцев назад
3Ls to me always represent the “true” magnum in the sense that 1.5L is basically just a scaled up bottle. While that sounds stupid as you could argue that is the 3L it has a different cork and from what I understand is not part of the main process for the large houses. You see that in price as well. Magnums scale well. Doubles not as much… Only problem is they often see display or storage vertically. I do wonder if off the shelf storage for large format exists…
@niftyorca
@niftyorca Год назад
Next challenge: different sizes of 1989 d'Yquem
@Alexander_Tronstad
@Alexander_Tronstad Год назад
Konstantin chugging a magnum of Yquem.. lol
@dominicschmidt4253
@dominicschmidt4253 Год назад
2001 would be my pick.
@dominicschmidt4253
@dominicschmidt4253 Год назад
But 89 Brion 😅
@apexxxx10
@apexxxx10 Год назад
Wine Snobs! ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-GoNtfdFwZkQ.html
@michaeljacobs5235
@michaeljacobs5235 Год назад
Great tasting! This reinforces my experience. Please do the same size test with a red (preferably cabernet or Left Bank Bordeaux) wine!
@phaton89
@phaton89 Год назад
The biggest bottle I’ve ever had opened is a Balthazar of Tignanello and it definitely was an experience. It was different than the average vintage, but I’m not sure I would say it was worlds apart. There’s also just the issue of a bottle that big being practical in ANY way. It was at a large event so it was largely for show more than effect.
@apexxxx10
@apexxxx10 Год назад
ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-GoNtfdFwZkQ.html
@goth_nick
@goth_nick Месяц назад
You invite all your neighbors over for a champagne feast!!
@lukerobertslr123
@lukerobertslr123 Год назад
Great Video! would have been interesting to have used a vintage champagne to ensure the time spent in bottle was consistent
@filipvarga3685
@filipvarga3685 Год назад
When going back to 5:49 when I look at you pour, I think you mixed up the quarter and half, because I'm positive you were holding the half bottle and then showed us the empty glass for half bottle (H) so it means you poured it to the quarter glass (Q). That means that the quarter bottle would have the least CO2 and that kind of aligns with the the few rare experiences I had with 200 ml bottles (usually other styles of sparkling wine like Prosecco, Sekt or Cava, not Champagne though), that the wine felt less sparkling than I would expect it to, although I didn't do a side-by-side comparison like you did. Anyhow - very interesting tasting here.
@tomo16v86
@tomo16v86 Год назад
It is called Quarter Bottle because of a obvious miss-translation. As you know, Quarter means "Viertel" in German... And as far as I know (friends told me), these bottles are primarily served in distinctive Etablissements primarily situated in "special Districts" (like "Rotlicht-Viertel" ). Therefore the bottle should not be named "quarter" but "district".
@charleswessels3053
@charleswessels3053 Год назад
I’ve always called the 1/4 bottle a split
@specialjeffreyke
@specialjeffreyke 7 месяцев назад
If I only I had the storage to store those big bottles. "Unfortunately" I stay with the regular 75cl bottles.
@geoffreycheng2895
@geoffreycheng2895 Год назад
Konstantin, I am quite surprised you didn't dive into the impact of transversage? Moet use transversage so that small format and very large format undergoes 2nd fermentation in the standard bottle, so it is normal to see the quality drops, especially considering the amount of bubbles. In contrast, Pommary does 2nd fermentation in large format up to Methuselah (or more) so there is no oxidation and loss of gas by transversage, it would be a better choice for comparison
@SuperEvomaniac
@SuperEvomaniac Год назад
Would love to see another review of your viewers favorite wines! My go to for you to try would be Michael David Petit Petit. In terms of value its easily my favorite wine! Love your videos thanks for all the great content!
@DouglasJWalker
@DouglasJWalker Год назад
A clever idea to make the content of this video. Did I miss you mention the year/s?
@marvinarobinson
@marvinarobinson Год назад
Quarter bottles are bottles transfers - not fermented in the bottles.
@carlosmartins8134
@carlosmartins8134 Год назад
Excellent video! Please, I would love to see a video dedicated to portuguese wines 😊
@luxemkingII
@luxemkingII Год назад
Check out French Cooking Academy for his roasted chicken with morell and champagne based sauce! That should be a great way to use some of it. Champagne vinegar is great for pickling, especially mustard seeds
@TobyDK
@TobyDK Год назад
Absolutely, the bigger the bottle, the less effect the surrounding world, has on the inside liquid . Having tasted a Vintage "De Saint Gall", in multiple sizes, it really does make a difference.
@andrewbrown7408
@andrewbrown7408 Год назад
The quarter bottle is actually 187mL so it’s a quarter of a standard bottle
@Dee.Murphy
@Dee.Murphy Год назад
I’ve NEVER wondered this! 😉( about champagne)
@colefooks4199
@colefooks4199 Год назад
I believe that half and quarter bottles are filled with standard after the 2nd fermentation.
@georgigeorgiev-ei4or
@georgigeorgiev-ei4or Год назад
Nce video again,Konstantin.I have read that is best to age champagne wine in larger size bottles based on the ratio of wine per bottle surface.Cheers.
@talithaowen4304
@talithaowen4304 Год назад
Maybe use the left over champagne as an ingredient in a fruit “jam” or I like to make vinegars. As a bartender it can add a nice twist to many sweet cocktails recipes. Or just add some St.Germaine. My fav
@KarolinaWojtczak01
@KarolinaWojtczak01 Год назад
I have been considering to get my first ever Magnum for my PhD defense celebration at the end of the year. Clearly it's worth it!
@apexxxx10
@apexxxx10 Год назад
Good for ya! ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-GoNtfdFwZkQ.html
@georgeyoussry5234
@georgeyoussry5234 Год назад
Try Egyptian wine called Beausoleil d'egypte made from an Egyptian grape called Bannati .. i think this wine is sold in France
@giuliettcamel
@giuliettcamel Год назад
Very interesting Kostantin. I wonder if this effect is consistent across different producers and different quality
@gabrielantunesmusic6785
@gabrielantunesmusic6785 4 месяца назад
I wish I lived nearby, after the recording of this video 😂
@maylloyd3348
@maylloyd3348 Год назад
What a good concept for a video. It's a great quiz question to know where your Balthazar comes in the line of things - and I think the names are different for still wines?
@ghettobougieahjoomab8663
@ghettobougieahjoomab8663 Год назад
Thank you! Always wondered. Now I know😊
@alejandropelaez17
@alejandropelaez17 Год назад
This tasting would be even more interesting with wines that have been aging in bottle for some time and have the same age. Cheers
@Kazashiz
@Kazashiz Год назад
Nice video! You can make some champagne vinegar which can be stored for a very long time. Amazing stuff
@GonzaloGEhnis
@GonzaloGEhnis Год назад
Amazing video! I have an out of topic question: what glasses do you use for this tasting? 🥂 Cheers!
@florensvanhovell1566
@florensvanhovell1566 Год назад
Hi Konstantin, Super interesting video! I have always wondered whether there’s a difference in quality between different bottle formats of the same wine and vintage. It makes sense to me that particularly for champagne, substantial differences can exist, if they are indeed fermented in the different bottle sizes. But I wonder whether the same quality gaps would exist for regular white or red wines? I like to buy half bottles of Bordeaux for example, since that normally means they’re approachable more quickly. But I have had the feeling in the past that those weren’t quite as good as the regular bottle of the same vintage. Perhaps you can do a follow-up video about this? Would be cool! Thx, Florens
@-PRPLEHZE-
@-PRPLEHZE- Год назад
Smaller sound out of a smaller bottle😄 that was good Konstantin Baum, Master Of Wine & Comedian
@apexxxx10
@apexxxx10 Год назад
“In Vino Veritas” ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-GoNtfdFwZkQ.html
@terryhsiao1745
@terryhsiao1745 Год назад
should open 3 bottles of each size and pour in one glass for more accurate evaluation.
@nonnegaard
@nonnegaard Год назад
through espresso i've been made aware of just how many variables things like these can have. i mean, are you even sure that the same bottle size would taste the same as another of the same size? it would be fun to try and see how consistent "mass produced" wines are. besides, when doing a test like this there are external factors at play as well. perhaps the half bottle was shaken slightly?
@bcck58
@bcck58 Год назад
Interesting, but maybe the producer puts the better stuff in the larger bottles?
@mareksicinski449
@mareksicinski449 7 месяцев назад
3:46 they're also called a piccolo
@michelem9341
@michelem9341 Год назад
Happy Easter!
@apexxxx10
@apexxxx10 Год назад
ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-GoNtfdFwZkQ.html
@duncanwmaxwell
@duncanwmaxwell Год назад
You beat us to it with your Q of the day…so what did you do with the Champagne? 🎉?
@Ralphgtx280
@Ralphgtx280 Год назад
200ml is not super far off 1/4 of a standard. 1/4 would be 187.5 at that point may as well make it 200ml
@gabrielmoratto9702
@gabrielmoratto9702 Год назад
My wife said "size doens't matter", i must agree
@rafaelrossioli9434
@rafaelrossioli9434 Год назад
What should I do now? Buy half a bottle and just drink it all up OR regular size, and put a champagne stopper half way, and then finish the other half next day?
@toddbod94
@toddbod94 Год назад
>starts pouring from the half bottle then holds the half bottle glass up an says the H mean half bottle. Editing error or goof?
@apexxxx10
@apexxxx10 Год назад
5:44 *The PICCOLO, again! *
@alton1682
@alton1682 Год назад
Very interesting video, thank you. One question though, do you have any idea of the disgorgement dates of the bottles?
@itsmederek1
@itsmederek1 Год назад
It would indeed be great to know if these were all disgorged in the same year or not
@williamrobinson7435
@williamrobinson7435 Год назад
Just ring round a few local friends and get some nice music on and a bit of suitable food and let these bubbles add thier magic.. Hic! Happy Easter to all. 🍾🥂🎶👯🎶🌟👍
@terryhsiao1745
@terryhsiao1745 Год назад
might from different batch of blending as well
@superkinkel
@superkinkel Год назад
Very interesting tasting. But since they are so close of one another, you would need to do this with e.g. five specimens of each size to be able to distinguish between impact of bottle size and normal production variations.
Далее
BLIND Tasting BATTLE feat. @wineking
18:39
Просмотров 114 тыс.
I Took a LUNCHBAR OFF A Poster 🤯 #shorts
00:17
Просмотров 4,4 млн
ROTTEN SWEET Wine - Tasting BOTRYTIS WINES
19:46
Просмотров 42 тыс.
Sparkling Wine Face Off - Will Champagne WIN?
22:45
Просмотров 44 тыс.
Why Real Champagne Is So Expensive | So Expensive
7:14
Did I WASTE a FORTUNE on one bottle of WINE?!
18:27
Просмотров 146 тыс.
Jancis Robinson - Champagne: Navigating sparkling wine
11:15
I Took a LUNCHBAR OFF A Poster 🤯 #shorts
00:17
Просмотров 4,4 млн