Well, weâve almost arrived at New Yearâs Eve when many of us will be popping the corks of Canadian sparkling wines, Spanish Cavas and French Champagnes (amongst others). Iâve assembled a cavalcade of sparkling wit and wisdom from around the internet, to assist with your shopping, enhance your sipping, and if youâre stuck for conversation at a New Yearâs party, thereâs plenty of fodder for you here as well.
For your reading pleasure:
Letâs get right to the nuts and bolts of the various ways sparkling wine can be made. Wine for Dummies (which is a recommended read for those getting into the good stuff) clearly and concisely offers various methods of producing sparkling wines.
Over at The Daily Beast, Kayleigh Kulp offers 10 ways you can improve your Champagne experience, passing along hearty truths like pink bubble doesnât mean itâs of any lesser quality, and (yup!) you can even decant the stuff!
Bloomberg gently tut-tuts its readers on appropriate glassware for sparkling, doing away with the coupe and the flute in favour of âregularâ wine glasses (while dispelling a popular myth involving Marie Antoinette).
Back on the home front in Toronto at The Star, wine critic Gord Stimmell shares 48 sparkling wines with 25 âlongtime friends, politicians, wine lovers, teachers, scientists, (and his) former nanny,â only to find their final take on the wines are much in line with his own.
A rather bizarre story from across the pond has Russian divers drinking Champagne around a New Yearâs tree underwater, at the bottom of the almost-frozen Shchitovaya Bay in the Ussuriysky Gulf. Say THAT five times fast!
For your listening pleasure:
St. Vincentâs Champagne Year is definitely for one of those low-key nightsâŠ.
⊠where St. Paul & The Broken Bonesâ Champagne Halloweâen should get the crowd jumpinâ at any time of year.
Of course, many prefer Champagne from a Paper Cup, just like Death Cab For Cutie in this bootleg live recording.
For your viewing pleasure:
When talking about Canadian sparkling wine, Summerhill Pyramid Winery is always one of the first names to come up, their Cipes line of bubble is the stuff of legend. Since great wine is almost always made in the vineyard, why not take a tour of Summerhillâs with Anthony Gismondi?
Admire the pros when they saber a bottle of sparkling wine? Hereâs Steve Edwards, now the director at Vancouverâs Boulevard Kitchen & Oyster Bar, with an easy how-to.
Of course, thatâs not nearly as entertaining as a compilation of sparkling wine fails, now is it?
And finally, speaking of fails, this is possibly the best evidence of why you should never try to make sparkling wine by 1. Using a SodaStream machine 2. With Beaujolais Nouveau 3. When you are a child.