
“I’ll be
pouring some excellent Cab Francs today.”
Whatever happened to “We’re
tasting some excellent Cab Francs today?” Everyone seems to be pouring everywhere these days. Am I the only person who thinks that this sounds strange? What would the equivalent be with chocolate chip cookies? “I’ll be
placing some excellent chocolate chip cookies today?”
Perhaps it’s the “me” part –
I’ll be pouring – that seems odd. It’s a little like when a waiter says “my marzipan is really delicious” or “I’ve got some amazing Chimichangas.” I’m sure
you do. Or maybe it’s just that the term pouring seems to imply vast amounts of liquids gushing forth as in “it’s not just raining, it’s pouring!”
Pouring wine rapidly and in huge volumes doesn’t seem to be strange at all on the internet; in fact it’s
de rigueur. A quick browse around most wine sites reveals wine being poured in ways that would put NASA velocity tests to shame. Is the subject really so boring that it needs to be tarted up by pushing the limits of fluid mechanics? Are the stock photo people really that bored? Was a stunt sommelier employed for any of these shots? Do I hear Eric Burdon and War playing
Spill the Wine somewhere?
Obviously there are a lot of unanswered questions here, so before I really scare myself and become Andy Rooney, the candidates for the most Extreme Pour of 2007 (in no apparent order) are:
Kapture Group Inc.

Not a wine site, but the Kapture Group sells equipment to help capture moments of vinous mayhem like the typhoon in a glass pictured here.
New York Times

Eric Asimov’s blog is called
The Pour so it should come as no surprise that they have a strong entry. A real study of contrasts here as a heavy rope of wine appears to be breaking the surface of an otherwise tranquil glass. Sediment be damned – get it in the glass!
Nat Decants

Is that a giant red wine Cobra threatening Natalie MacLean’s wholesome head? Watch out Natalie!
67 Wine

Not a lot of action here but a lot of wine. Do still waters run deep? The half-full half-empty debate certainly has no room here. No! Fill it to the brim! Let it be known that the people of
67 Wine are not stingy!

Given the apparent lack of gravity, I would call this site
Dining on the Moon instead of
Dining on the Vine. Is that a bottle or a hose? Waiter, please bring me the 1990 La Tâche and a mop!

The quintessential British tableware maker weighs in with a classic Poseidon Adventure pour. Either that or they’re introducing a line of Chablis coloured baby Baboons in crystal.
Please Vote:
{democracy:8}
Win a Shiny New Spittoon!

To enter, simply leave a comment below. A winner will be selected Monday December 17th at random. You don't have to write anything clever. A simple "nice spittoon" will do.
Comments
Love the over-the-topness of Dining on the Vine
Nice pics!
nice spittoon
This phenomenon obviously results from the plain and tragic fact that the Internet, being a medium that addresses sight and sound but is incapable of smell, taste and touch, is a singularly inappropriate home for the experience of wine. This gives rise to an awful lot of silly and irrelevant chatter along with these desperate attempts to work wine into the medium at hand. If we weren’t such entertaining writers, we should really both quit altogether. Maybe we should be writing about something else, like spittoons.
Nice Spittoon it would look great in my wine celler. I’ll keep it nice and shiny too with a label that says where I got it because I never waste a good cab franc. (don’t let the people I work with see this wine pouring I just got them doing everything properly)
Reminds me when somebody poured clear liquid detergent into a glass and made it look tasty, until the bottle came into view.
Nice Spittoon
nice spittoon
a spitoon is something one never knows that one needs, until one does, and then it’s tooo late.
what a lovely bucket to have in my cribb