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Default chilled wine in supermarket

On Sat, 4 Nov 2017 12:46:04 -0400, Ed Pawlowski > wrote:

>> That's pretty much what I do now. I don't have sufficient sensitivity
>> to detect whether the wine is okay or slightly off. I am not what is
>> known as an "oenophile".
>>

>
>It will be safe for a couple of months. Taste is another factor though.


It would be taste safe (not turning to vinegar) once opened for at
least a week ... right? As you can tell, I'm a wine newbie trying to
understand some basics.
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Default chilled wine in supermarket

On 2017-11-04 12:42 PM, notbob wrote:
> On 2017-11-04, Ben Oliver > wrote:
>
>> Same - my favourite wine will always be one that you can drink at the
>> table every day, over what is essentially liquid gold.

>
> Last I heard, mark-up of a bottle of wine was somewhere around 300%.
> Single glass, more.


That depends a lot on where you live. Around here you can get bottle of
wine in a restaurant for $30 or more, and a glass will run you about 7.
Towns to the north of us charge $2-3 per glass more, and if we go to
Toronto it is usually at least $12 for a glass of wine. The $7 for a
glass of wine for a bottle that sells for $16 works out a little more
than than 200%. When they charge $12 for a glass it is quite bit more
than $300.


FWIW... I just got back from wine tasting at the winery that is
supplying the wine for this year's art festival. We are trying to keep
the price down to $5, mainly to avoid issues with making change, but
also to keep the price point low enough to sell. We get 1/3 off the
wine, so we can do about 150% markup.




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Default chilled wine in supermarket

On 11/5/2017 11:32 AM, wrote:
> On Sun, 05 Nov 2017 16:28:08 +0000,
wrote:
>
>> On Sat, 4 Nov 2017 17:20:18 -0400, jmcquown >
>> wrote:
>>
>>> On 11/4/2017 1:35 PM,
wrote:
>>>> On Sat, 4 Nov 2017 12:46:04 -0400, Ed Pawlowski > wrote:
>>>>
>>>>>> That's pretty much what I do now. I don't have sufficient sensitivity
>>>>>> to detect whether the wine is okay or slightly off. I am not what is
>>>>>> known as an "oenophile".
>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> It will be safe for a couple of months. Taste is another factor though.
>>>>
>>>> It would be taste safe (not turning to vinegar) once opened for at
>>>> least a week ... right? As you can tell, I'm a wine newbie trying to
>>>> understand some basics.
>>>>
>>> How about this? Since you're buying it chilled, once you open it how
>>> about store it in the refrigerator? Or don't you own one?
>>>
>>> Jill

>>
>> If I buy several bottles, there may not be enough room in the fridge.
>>
>> Okay, so I can keep an opened bottle of previously chilled white wine
>> at room temperature for a week. That's the answer I was looking for.

>
> You need this:
>
https://www.amazon.com/Magic-Chef-MC...ler+countertop
>


Nice!

But for a lone bottle:

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00VVT57DO..._detai l_page

Air Cork Wine Preserver (with spare balloon) - as seen on Shark Tank
3.9 out of 5 stars 230 customer reviews | 9 answered questions
Price: $28.00 & FREE Shipping. Details

Sold by Air Cork and Fulfilled by Amazon. Gift-wrap available.
Color: Burgundy

Burgundy
$28.00


Charcoal
$28.00


Charcoal - Barrel
$28.00


White
$28.00

Air Cork Wine Preserver - includes Air Cork device, storage pouch,
instructions and spare balloon.

Protects wine from oxidation for 3-4 days. Balloon will NOT alter or
affect the taste of wine.

To Use: Lower balloon into bottle until at wine, squeeze the bulb pump
to inflate the balloon and watch it create an air tight seal from within
the bottle.

Designed for standard size bottles only: For use in 750-ml size bottles.
Not for carbonated beverages.

Balloons should last 80+ uses and are easily replaceable.
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