Age Is Just a Number: The Durand

Age is just a number.

Until you’re opening a 1989.

The Durand is designed for older bottles  where corks can be dry, brittle, and prone to fracture. It stabilizes these fragile corks so the pour stays clean. Cork-free.

Named for sommelier Yves Durand and developed by Mark Taylor, a collector who needed a better solution for mature bottles, the tool combines a traditional screw with prongs to support compromised corks.

Corks deteriorate with storage shifts, oxidation, temperature fluctuation, and time. It’s just material science.

Blonde Behind the Bucket

Mid-service the other night, I didn’t stop to photograph the bottom half of the cork beside the decanter. Invasive guests service and all. The cork split. Bottom half extracted. Wine untouched. Job done.

The Durand stores in its cork case and requires little maintenance. Wipe with a polishing cloth. If needed, wash with warm water and mild soap. Dry thoroughly before storing.

Some bottles don’t require safeguarding.

A screw cap. A standard waiter’s key. That’s it. Done.

Others do.

Link below if you’re building a bar or cellar with intention.

Shop The Durand corkscrew

This may be commissionable

Taste. Toast. Train.

The ISO Glass, Explained

A glass can make a cocktail.

It can absolutely make a wine.

Shape matters — not just aesthetically, but functionally. Aroma, temperature, how the liquid moves, where it lands on the palate. That’s true for cocktails, and it’s foundational for tasting.

Enter the ISO glass.

ISO stands for International Organization for Standardization. The ISO tasting glass (standard ISO 3591) was created as a universal reference point — the same glass, the same volume, anywhere in the world. Wine, beer, spirits. Even water, technically. Though, I won’t pretend I’ve tested on that one.

What I do know is wine.

The ISO glass holds 215 ml total, with a standard tasting pour of 50–75 ml (about 2 oz) leaving plenty of headspace for swirling and aroma concentration. The inward curve captures lifted aromatic compounds; the narrow rim delivers them cleanly to the nose. No distractions. No theatrics. Just clarity.

And yes, they’re kind of adorable. Somewhere between the mini Tabasco bottles and the Maldon salt travel box.

Perfectly proportioned. Quietly utilitarian. Almost academic chic—OK academic chic.

Best part? They’re accessible. Most ISO glasses are priced around $5–10 per glass, with multi-glass sets typically retailing around $50, depending on brand and quality. Not precious. Not precious-looking. Just correct.

If you’re tasting, truly tasting—this is the baseline.

Everything else is interpretation.

Toast. Taste. Train.

Shop the ISO glass

This may be commissionable.

Always Sparkle: Discover the Charm of Montmartre Brut

This wine is clear. This wine is pale straw yellow. This wine is tiny bubbles, mousse foam. This wine is bright and lively. This wine is apples and pears. This wine is bread. This wine is Old World European, specifically French. This wine is Ugni blanc grape (notable Cognac region and some Italian regions). This wine is light. This wine is casual. This wine is an everyday wine. This wine is citrus, lemon peels. This wine is brut sparkling wine, a drier wine. This wine is Montmartre Brut Sparkling Wine. This wine is.

This wine is affordable about $11.99 a bottle and available for purchase at select online retailers. This wine pairs well with shellfish, oysters, potato chips and light Chinese foods, hamachi, salads, lights dishes, and sushi.

Bar Chef Notes: Please drink responsibly

Where to buy the goods? Champagne buckets, flutes and other wine and kitchen related items? Blonde Behind the Bucket Storefront of course. Please know I may receive compensation from eligible purchases. Thank you.

1994 In A Bottle: Barbareso

They brought it to me to taste. Sipped and spat. Sipped and spat. I was too busy to go to the table. The more brown the wine is a good indicator of age. This wine is DOCG, high classification for a wine under Italian law. The letters stand for Denominazione di Origine Controllata e Garantita and in other words, strict regulations for wine production.

This wine is aged. This wine has a clear with halos of brown maroon colors. This wine is notes of dried fruit, wood, and vanilla. This wine is subtle cocoa nibs, bitter chocolate. This wine is earth. This wine is Old World European, specifically from Italian Piedmont, Barbaresco. This wine is considered a younger Barolo. This wine is 100% Nebbiolo grapes, one of the oldest in this particular region. This wine has light tannins and a calm finish. This wine is single vineyard. This wine is Martinenga estates. This wine is 1994. This wine is.

This wines’s price retail USD varies from cellar. This wine pairs well with the usual suspects: Parmesan Reggiano, meats, truffles, mushroom dishes, bresaola, steaks, beef carpaccio, clean steak tartare, and amaretti cookies. Drink now.

Where to buy the goods? You know decanters, The Durand and stemware? Blonde Behind the Bucket Storefront. Please know I may receive compensation from eligible purchases. Thank you so much!

Single Serve White Wine Sangria Spritz 2.0

Figs and Riesling, oh my! In the mood for Sangria? I almost always am. With some figs and Riesling on hand, I’m getting creative. Let’s get to it.

Single Serve White Wine Spritz 2.0

Ingredients

2oz hibiscus tea (use tea bags if you wish, I prefer dried hibiscus flowers with hot water and steep, strain and chill)

2oz of honey syrup (2:1 ratio honey to water)

1/2 oz Grey Goose vodka

3 muddles figs (the plumpest you can find)

1 oz saville citrus (it looks like an orange but bitter like a lemon, sort of. It’s a hybrid? Hey Siri)

1/2 oz sparkling water (your choose, bubble texture doesn’t really matter here)

Top with as much Kabinett Mosel Riesling crisp wine as you wish (I love a German Kabinett) I use Zilliken.

1/4 teaspoon black pepper

Method

Muddle the figs and black pepper. Add citrus, honey syrup and hibiscus tea and then vodka. Best to put honey syrup in jigger first and then use the citrus to wash it; the remaining stickies from the syrup. Add ice and shake. Pour into bucket glass over ice. Add sparkling water then the wine and give a quick stir. Top with sliced figs.

Glass: bucket glass or high ball glass

Garnish: sliced figs

Bar Chef Notes: more on the wine here. Remember when I attempted (wink, wink) to open my Riesling using a tuning fork?! Kabinett is specific to Germany, FYI.

Please drink responsibly and be of the legal drinking age. Thank you.

Where to buy the goods? Bucket glasses, black pepper and stuffs? Blonde Behind the Bucket Storefront. Please know, I may receive compensation for eligible purchases. Thank you!

This Wine Is

I’m jet-lagged and making my way to the supermarket, which is on my list of things to do. I’m glad I made it.

Yesterday, I was pleasantly surprised and wished I had known about it sooner. There was a tasting at Erewhon Market.

This wine is clear. This wine is garnet. This wine is dark fruit. This wine is an Old European soul biodynamic New World California Syrah. This wine is you need a case for your personal cellar. This wine is don’t forget to tell your friends after you have secured all the bottles you can hold. This wine is 2015. This wine is Chateau Bellevue 1881. This wine is.

This wine pairs well with mustard greens, as well as vegetable and meat pâtés. It also pairs well with pasta, cheese and charcuterie boards, herbed ricotta with toast and fish and Thai dishes. This wine retails for about $88 USA dollars. Drink now.

Where to buy bucket glasses, wine openers and wine pumps? Blonde Behind the Bucket Storefront of course. Please know I may receive commissions from eligible purchases. Thank you.

An Underrated Rioja?

I recently read that this wine was underrated. While I can’t say for certain, I agree with that sentiment? At least not by me. How about that? If you haven’t tried this one, you should.

This wine is clear. This wine is garnet. This wine is earth. This wine is dark fruits, black cherries, and spice (everything nice). This wine is dry tannins from thick-skinned grapes. This wine is Tempranillo grapes. This wine is Old World European wine. This wine is oak barrels, French, and American. This wine is Crianza, meaning aged for a specific time usually about twelve months. This wine is younger. This wine is everyday wine in a bucket glass wine. This wine is superb. This wine has an exquisite mouth feel is approachable and just damn good. This wine is a little bit of Spain in a bottle. This wine is Marqués de Cáceres Rioja Crianza 2018. This wine is.

This wine is excellent with or without food. This wine pairs well with baguettes with and jams, raw purple onions, French onion soups, cheese and charcuterie boards, burgers, sweet and sour cabbage dishes, marinade and flash fried tofu garnished with scallions (onions again), pizzas, and pastas. This wine also pairs well with chalky chocolate ice cream or cherry clafoutis. This wine is available at Whole Foods Market. This wine retails for about $16-$25 USA dollars a bottle. Buy a case. Store it properly. Drink now. Recommended drinking temperature is about 60 degrees Fahrenheit.

Bar Chef Sommelier notes: wine title missing accent indications from some posts, sorry to the wine.

Where can you buy the goods? You know, a similar bucket glass (like the one from Anthropologie on South Beverly Drive around 2019 ish since closed), wine glasses (if that’s your preference), a corkscrew, and other items at Blonde Behind the Bucket Storefront of course. Please know that I may receive commissions from qualifying purchases.

Please drink responsibly and be of the legal drinking age. Thank you.

Gold in a Bottle: Krug 168th

It takes me about three days to taste most of the wine. The wine goes into the refrigerator sealed and dated. The next day, I pour another glass using two different style glasses – ISO and then a bucket – noting any differences. Does anyone else do this?

This wine is monumental. The beauty and feeling of this wine are unphotographable. Any attempt to capture it would not be god enough. This wine is pale yellow. This wine is clear. This wine is sparkling. This wine is Old World with gold flakes sparkling racing to the top leaving me to wonder did they inject gold into this bottle. The professional term known as vivacious. This wine is wow. This wine is extraordinary prestige, a true cause for celebration. This wine is mouth watering citrus. This wine is a gingerbread nose. This wine is a first burp. This wine is delicate and very much alive. This wine is its unique identity with every sip. This wine is 198 different wines from 11 years. This wine is 52% Pinot Noir 35% Chardonnay and 13 % Pinot Menuier. This wine is grapes from 1996 to 2012. This wine is cork received 2019. This wine is champagne. This wine is KRUG 168th. This wine is exceptional. This wine is unforgettable. This wine is.

This wine pairs well with the usual suspects: caviar, oysters, French fries, salmon, shellfish, frog legs, mushroom pâté, crispy cold salads, and ginger snap cookies. This wine retails for about $220 USA dollars. Drink now or hold. Buy two of you can.

Where to buy the goods? Glasses and champagne stoppers and stuffs? Blonde Behind the Bucket Storefront. Please know I may earn commissions from eligible purchases. Thank you.

Ruinart Blanc de Blanc tasting

This wine is straw-pale yellow. This wine is clear. This wine is flowers and pears. This wine sparkles with a light golden effervescence that playfully tickles and prickles the tongue. This wine is a classic let’s say continuously eccentrically a popping of delicate bubbles that almost instantly dissolve. This wine is Old World or as they say now, European. This wine is subtle chalk terroir. This wine is purity. This wine is art. This wine is stratification of creativity. This wine is easy. This wine is a mastery. This wine is champagne. This wine is resemblance to…This wine is Chardonnay grapes. This wine is Blanc de Blanc. This wine is the perfect dinner date. This wine is recognizably Ruinart Blanc de Blanc. This wine is.

This wine pairs with caviar, oyster and seafoods, extra creamy pasta dishes, cheeses and sour cream cake with vanilla frosting. And popcorn. This wine retails for $80 USD. Drink now.

Where to buy the goods? By goods, I mean wine glasses, plates, cake stands and champagne stoppers? Blonde Behind the Bucket Storefront of course. Please know I may receive commissions for eligible purchases. Thank you so much!

Wine Tasting: Murphy-Goode

I will always taste this grape varietal. New World, Old World. Box, bottle, cork, or screw top. It doesn’t matter.

This wine is conveniently fashioned with a screw top for easy accessibility. This wine is ruby. This wine is ripe fruit. This wine is a bit of jam. This wine is cherry strawberries plum. This wine is clear. This wine is soft and subtle with a clean finish. This wine is light to medium tannin with hints of vanilla and maybe a note of chocolate. This wine is approachable. This wine is New World. This wine is California. This wine is Alexander Valley. This wine is Murphy-Goode. This wine is.

This wine is excellent on its own or paired with food. This wine pairs with fatty fish, red meat and game and pastas. It also pairs well with cheese and charcuterie boards. Together or separate. This wine retails $11-17$ USD. Drink now.

Where to find the goods? Wine glasses and stuffs? Blonde Behind the Bucket Storefront of course. Please know I may receive commissions from eligible purchases.