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Best Product: Vacu Vin Wine Saver

10-21-vacuvin.jpgAs we go through our days, we are constantly on the look out for those items for household living that are just indispensable and make us happy whenever we use them.

The most recent one we noticed in our own home was the Vacu Vin Wine Saver...

 
 

We drink a great deal of wine, but we don't always finish the bottle. When you simply put the cork back in, it never tastes the same a day later, never mind a few days after that. However, when you put one of these stoppers in and suck out all the air oxidation nearly halts and you can preserve wine's best taste for a really long time (a week is no problem). The Vacu Vin Wine Saver is available in lots of places for $12.99.

While we thought it was a bit of a gimmick at first, we now use this thing on every bottle and end up with little grey stoppers all over our house. (Re-edited from 2005-10-21 original post, Maxwell)

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Comments (28)

My parents are huge wine fanatics and they have used this for years. It works great. I don't bother - I just finish the bottle ;)

posted by New Tenant on 2005-10-21 12:04:16

I LOVE this device. It's great for having wine on hand at all times to cook with . . .

posted by guido on 2005-10-21 12:55:55

I use it all the time. I am not a wine expert so I dont really know how much they are helping. I guess they must be :-)

posted by DM on 2005-10-21 13:01:43

This item is always on my short list for hostess or housewarming gifts. A home bar essential, as far as I'm concerned.

posted by Enrique on 2005-10-21 13:12:12

Okay, this may be EXACTLY what I've been looking for. I've seen similar items but have been told that they don't actually work. This particular one seems to get glowing reviews :)

Now my question is, does anyone have any idea of for how long it does work? Say, for example, if I have one glass of wine per night and re-vacuum after each pour -- when would I start noticing a change in taste? Just curious. Thanks!!!

posted by chickpea on 2005-10-21 14:07:34

Also, just wondering -- has anybody compared using the Vacu Vin with pouring the remaining wine into a smaller bottle?

posted by chickpea on 2005-10-21 14:13:05

I'm with New Tenant here... can't remember the last time a bottle was opened and not finished.

posted by a on 2005-10-21 14:20:15

I think it's sufficient to use the Vacu Vin only at the end of your meal or evening. Trying to use it after each pour seems excessive to me. I believe that some exposure to air helps a wine "open up" as they say. Maybe luigi will chime in here -- he's a vino connoisseur.

posted by Kathryn on 2005-10-21 14:20:57

Oh, I'm sorry -- by saying "after each pour" I was implying once per night (since I only have one glass of wine at a time, it's the same for me).

posted by chickpea on 2005-10-21 14:39:56

It does work repeatedly --- although I've noticed a change in the wine when I keep it a week and keep opening and closing. That would be with whites at my house, cooking.

My chemical engineer/wine connoisseur cousin does the progressively smaller vessel thing with his reds, and is very happy (and diabolical looking with all those beakers.) Either way is great if your SO doesn't drink (or doesn't exist!)

Not for nothing, the NYS wine store in Soho uses these things, with a mechanized air sucker instead of a hand pump.

Luigi, you appear to have a stalker named Kathryn.

posted by guido on 2005-10-21 16:42:48

Similar, however a bit on the pricey side, but these are pretty nice also:

http://momastore.org/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDisplay?catalogId=10001&storeId=10001&productId=32030

posted by byrd on 2005-10-22 21:39:38

And why is the cork not good enough to reuse? What is the deal with the screwcaps on wines today...? It's some kinda trend that I don't get.

posted by Andrew on 2005-12-13 22:22:59

I want to notice that in general and is whole like all OK, though there are also some defects in registration and colour scale. If to compare this site to another: http://www.via-50mg.50megs.com/ or about these here for example: http://www.v-female.sd-search.com/ the design last to me is more pleasant.

posted by Vikta on 2006-02-24 12:51:41

Andrew resusing the cork doesn't deal with the air that is already in the bottle.
Screwcaps have been in use for awhile. Many winemakers are changing to screwcaps as they don't have to deal with cork going bad. It is not an automatic indication of inferior wine.

posted by alexis on November 23rd 2007 at 9:46am
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There is just the two of us, and we just have one glass a night with dinner. We've had one of these for a while and we love it. We usually finish the bottle within two days or so, and it seems to work really well. We love it.

posted by chrisB on November 23rd 2007 at 10:27am
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Ha! I bought one of these this week and used it on Thanksgiving for the first time. I want to savor this bottle of Frogs Leap Zinfandel and I usually can't get the original cork back into any bottle.

posted by Ter on November 23rd 2007 at 10:49am
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I've used one for several years now and love it. In fact, I used it yesterday to save the wine leftover from my Thanksgiving dinner.

posted by Maureen on November 23rd 2007 at 11:46am
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If you're going to finish the bottle the next day, you'll probably be able to get away with recorking it -- it sometimes helps to use the other end of the cork, btw -- but any longer something like this does help.

I must add that I'm sitting here enjoying the image of different sized bottles filled with red wine, each with its own vacuum seal and some sort of Vincent Price figure hovering over the process....

posted by JonathanB on November 23rd 2007 at 12:11pm
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A wine snob told me that the difference between such devices and recapping the bottle with the original cork is negligible.

posted by paulmuscat on November 23rd 2007 at 2:42pm
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Paulmuscat: The wine snob was wrong. As Alexis pointed out, if you just stick the cork back in, the air that has been introduced into the wine bottle contributes to oxidation, ruining the wine after a day or so. With the Vacu Vin, the air is sucked OUT of the bottle, creating a vacuum (there's a "whoosh" when you pull out the rubber cork later to reopen the bottle). I'm one of those folks who likes half a glass of wine with dinner, and this device easily keeps an opened bottle good for a week ... I've been known to keep one around for two weeks, and it's still fine. (I'm talking white wine ... don't know how long red would keep, but I'm about to find out!) By the way, Cook's Illustrated rated all the wine-keeping devices not long ago, and the expensive ones couldn't hold a candle to Vacu Vin, which came out on top!

posted by Jane on November 23rd 2007 at 4:15pm
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Paulmuscat, while it's true as Jane says a cork won't work, i once heard a noted wine expert advise just reusing a couple half bottles with screw tops for leftovers from bottles sealed with corks. As long as you own a funnel and drink up within a few days, you're fine and you don't have to spend $$ on anything fancier. Works for me.

posted by binxie on November 23rd 2007 at 6:25pm
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This thing works véry well. We have one at home (only thing is that I don't drink... And my partner doesn't really drink wine anymore either, so I might give it away one day when I 'cure' the kitchen :).

posted by Princess Judy on November 24th 2007 at 3:14am
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It's true, it keeps an opened up bottle of wine in good condition for at least a week.

posted by Princess Judy on November 24th 2007 at 3:17am
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it is probably one of the best bangs for the buck out there. I think it costs less than 20 dollars, so we're not talking big ticket fancy pants wine techie item. It's easy, it's fast, no need to keep empty half bottles and funnels around, and you can reuse the corks indefinitely. All-around winner in my kitchen.

posted by 212gretchen on November 24th 2007 at 7:43am
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As to question about screwcaps, they are preferred by many winemakers because they guarantee a uniform wine free from random cork taint and oxidisation. Gotta love a good crisp NZ Marlborough.

posted by HongKonger on November 24th 2007 at 1:35pm
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love it. it keeps my wine way past it's prime.

posted by theambershow on November 24th 2007 at 3:37pm
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We've been using this for years, and especially like the newly redesigned rubber cork (the one pictured here..). We also HIGHLY recommend getting a magnetized wine collar (about 35.00 US dollars). Absolutely astonishing how much better inexpensive wines (red and white) taste and a cinch to use.

posted by LIB212 on November 25th 2007 at 8:17am
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In Dec 2006, Consumer Reports did a test of wine preservation systems (it's here: http://www.consumerreports.org/cro/food/beverages/wine/wine-12-06/wine-preservation/1206_wine_storage.htm?resultPageIndex=1&resultIndex=4&searchTerm=wine). The conclusion? They all work about the same, and about as well as just putting the cork back. Still, I use the Vacu-Vin. Maybe because I'm a good American and believe in gadgets. Maybe because I bought an unopened one at a garage sale for $1.

posted by mags66 on November 25th 2007 at 3:56pm
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