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.