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Go get yourself some cheap wine glasses*

*With apologies to ZZ Top — rest in peace, Dusty Hill

In an attempt to keep my kids from tearing each others’ hair out, last weekend we went shopping at a thrift store. My 12-year-old son recently got an old gaming console and a bunch of games, and wanted to find a controller (and more games, of course). My daughter, 14, was more interested in tracking down oversized button-up shirts, hoodies and sweaters in the men’s section.

Which left me to scour the shelves for one of my favourite thrift store finds — glassware.

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I’m the last person who should be buying more wine glasses — I’ve got more than I know what to do with already. In addition to the six smallish Zwilling J.A. Henckels glasses that are great for whites, I have five five (formerly six — oops) larger Luigi Bormioli red wine glasses — all very good and reasonably priced. That should be enough.

It ain’t. For my birthday a couple years back I received a Zalto universal glass as well as a Zalto Burgundy glass. Zaltos are the Ferraris of wine glasses — mouth-blown, lead-free crystal stemware made in Austria, and frighteningly thin and expensive. (The Burgundy glass is around $100 with taxes.)

For a long time I was almost too scared to use the Zaltos (think Ferris Bueller taking out Cameron’s dad’s Ferrari), but you only live once, and so I’ve started using them more often. Heck, I’ve even started putting them in the dishwasher, which apparently is safer than washing them by hand.

Beyond the Zaltos I’ve got all manner of random single glasses I’ve collected over the years in every shape and size you can imagine — which, for a guy who often tastes wine alone (for work purposes, of course), all seems like a bit much. (The beer glass situation, I’m afraid, is even worse.)

This isn’t too far off from what my glassware cabinet looks like. Yikes. (Wayne Glowacki / Winnipeg Free Press files)

This isn’t too far off from what my glassware cabinet looks like. Yikes. (Wayne Glowacki / Winnipeg Free Press files)

Miniature figurines fiends, salt and pepper shaker enthusiasts, rare vinyl hoarders — there are collectors aplenty out there scouring thrift stores for gems. For me I guess it’s wine glasses. If you’re looking for great deals and don’t need a full set of glasses, you can often find some real gems.

You need to know what you’re looking for, of course. The best wine glasses are typically thin crystal, are clear (ie. devoid of colour) and have a decent-sized bowl for swirling. Some of the better-known good-quality brands I look for while thrifting include Riedel, Spiegelau, Schott Zwiesel or Eisch, but there are plenty of nice off-brand stems out there to be found.

My big find — and I do mean big — was a pair of Eisch Vino Nobile “giant” glasses for the absolute steal of a price of eight bucks for the two. They retail new for $120 for six, and are comparable to Riedel’s sommelier series Burgundy glasses, which are over $100 a stem. Made in Germany of lead-free crystal, the Eisch glasses are truly giant — they stand over 25 centimetres tall and hold over a litre of liquid. That’s right — they can each hold an entire bottle of wine, which is ridiculous. (And not recommended, for fear of snapping the stems.)

Despite my own advice above, I lived on the edge and poured this entire Aussie Shiraz into my new-to-me Eisch glass. (It was then poured back into the bottle rather than consumed. Well, most of it at least.)

Despite my own advice above, I lived on the edge and poured this entire Aussie Shiraz into my new-to-me Eisch glass. (It was then poured back into the bottle rather than consumed. Well, most of it at least.)

For fun (well, fun for me at least), I decided to do a taste test. I poured 60 ml of a California Cabernet Sauvignon into five different glasses ­ — a Zwilling, a Riedel Ouverture Magnum glass, the Bormioli, the Zalto Burgundy and the Eisch to see which I’d prefer.

From left: The Zwilling J.A. Henckels, Riedel Ouverture Magnum, Luigi Bormioli, Zalto Burgundy and the Eisch Vino Nobile glasses, each with 60ml of Cabernet Sauvignon in them.

From left: The Zwilling J.A. Henckels, Riedel Ouverture Magnum, Luigi Bormioli, Zalto Burgundy and the Eisch Vino Nobile glasses, each with 60ml of Cabernet Sauvignon in them.

The Zalto and the Eisch provide the most amount of contact between the wine and oxygen, which softens up the mouth-drying tannins in a red and, when the wine is swirled, offers the best chance to pick up different aromatic components of a wine. By contrast the Zwilling, the smallest of the glasses, retained the most grippy tannins of the lot and was the least aromatic, no matter how much I swirled the stuff.

In this experiment, my favourite glass of the bunch was the Riedel, which balanced the fruit and tannin the best. This doesn’t surprise me — it has been my go-to workhorse wine glass for the better part of two decades. Thin but sturdy and with a nice short stem, I’ve loved and lost many Ouverture Magnums in my time, and tend to pick up new ones at The Bay when they (regularly) go on sale. They’re $35 for a pair regular price.

I’m certainly no snob when it comes to what vessel I use to drink my wine — I’ve enjoyed reds and whites from ‘70s-style goblets, coffee mugs at parties, plastic cups at the lake or even, in rare and less dignified circumstances, straight from the bottle.

The next time you find yourself thrift shopping, check out the glassware options — you never know what you might find. Well, other than countless tacky beer mugs. You’ll definitely find those.

 

Ben Sigurdson

 

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Tasty tidbits

In lieu of a full festival, Folklorama is hosting three nights of virtual cultural performances this weekend. Pair your viewing with an order from one of the local restaurants participating in the organization’s first-ever Ethno-Cultural Food Week.

•••

Local wine and cider producer Shrugging Doctor recently nabbed a double gold at the All Canadian Wine Championships for its apple cinnamon mead. The mead is made from Manitoba honey, crushed apples and real cinnamon, and is available for $16.49 at Liquor Marts and from Shrugging Doctor’s Brooklyn St. facility.

•••

Exchange District neighbours Peasant Cookery and the King’s Head pub have come together to create one super-patio that takes up the block of King St. north of Bannatyne Ave. Dubbed Peasant Gardens, the extended patio opens up on weekends and will stick around into September.

Recommended fare

Ben: I finally got to Lake of the Woods Brewing Co.’s Winnipeg location in True North Square. Their cozy shop has a selection of their Winnipeg-brewed beer for sale, so I grabbed a crowler of their very good Sasquatch black lager. (A crowler, by the way, is a 946ml can, the equivalent of two 473ml “tall boy’ cans.

Lake of the Woods Brewing Co.’s crowler can.

Lake of the Woods Brewing Co.’s crowler can.

One of the perks of being the books editor is getting advance copies of forthcoming titles, and I was thrilled to see Miriam Toews’ Fight Night land on my doorstep. It’s told from the perspective of nine-year-old Swiv, who lives with her mom and grandma in Toronto; I’m only about 20 pages in, but so far it brings all the joy and wit and humour of Toews’ best books. The book comes out Aug. 24.

Not surprisingly, my 14-year-old daughter is a huge Billie Eilish fan, and so her sophomore album Happier Than Ever has been on heavy rotation in my household. Her first studio album When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go? was very good, and in my opinion this one’s even better.

Eva: Fête’s strawberry rhubarb crumble is high on my list of favourite ice cream flavours — though they really knock all the fruity flavours out of the park. I picked up a cup at the South Osborne Farmers’ Market, but they also have pints available at their Assiniboine Avenue shop.

I grabbed a bite from Feastro Global Bistro the other day while checking out The Garden on Portage Avenue for the first time. The food truck has a wide-ranging menu and I was quite taken with the shawarma meal box and the butter chicken poutine (the fries stayed surprisingly crispy under all that sauce).

I rewatch Samin Nosrat’s 2018 Netflix series Salt Fat Acid Heat every once in a while because, a) I love her approach to cooking and b) the four episode production is a feast for the eyes. If you haven’t already, I highly recommend giving it a watch. I also fell hard for Home Cooking, Nosrat’s pandemic podcast with co-host Hrishikesh Hirway. Together they answer listener cooking questions and giggle their way through personal anecdotes. It’s wholesome and informative!

What’s simmering

Jesse Oberman of Next Friend Cider wants your backyard apples, cherries and pears. He climbed up Ben’s backyard cherry tree in search of fruit, and detailed his back story and plans for a future Free Press feature.

Jesse Oberman of Next Friend Cider has released two bottlings of apple-based cider, which he made at Barn Hammer Brewing Co.’s Wall St. facility. (Mikaela Mackenzie / Winnipeg Free Press)

Jesse Oberman of Next Friend Cider has released two bottlings of apple-based cider, which he made at Barn Hammer Brewing Co.’s Wall St. facility. (Mikaela Mackenzie / Winnipeg Free Press)

Recipes and reviews

A cheesy vegan appetizer: Céline Land is the owner and head cheesemonger of the Vegan Fromagerie. For our ongoing Homemade series, she shared a recipe for vegan summer bruschetta made with cherries, strawberries (or any in-season fruits) and her vegan feta. It’s a dish she makes often with her nine-year-old son and constant kitchen helper Félix. Check out a how-to video on our Instagram or Facebook pages.

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESSCéline Land and her son, Félix, 9, love to cook together.

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESSCéline Land and her son, Félix, 9, love to cook together.

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