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All the Gear You Need to Enjoy Great Wine, From Glasses to Corkscrews and More

The right tools will make your drinking life immeasurably better. (And you don't have to spend a fortune!)

Sunset Staff

A loaf of bread, a jug of wine, and thou” may sound like the utmost in romantic simplicity, but if thou and thine wish to drink thy wine, you’re going to need something with which to open the bottle and something to pour it into. And if it’s a really nice bottle, you might want a way to preserve it and a place to store your burgeoning collection. Worry not! We’ve rounded up a host of tools to make thy wine life much more enjoyable.


Essential Wine Gear

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Le Creuset Waiter’s Friend Corkscrew

A textbook version of the ubiquitous sommelier’s knife, but with a comfier handle, a sharp blade for slicing through capsules, and a double-hinged lever for easy extraction of even the most stubborn synthetic corks.

Le Creuset Waiter's Friend Corkscrew, from $22.46
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Riedel WineWings Glasses

We’ve duked it out over fancy glassware in the past, but this series of wine glasses might make converts of the mason jar set. With a flatter bottom profile and undulating curves to afford for vigorous swirls, the Silhouette of each glass is designed to provide maximum air contact with the contents. That means the aromas meet your nose and meld with the palate of your wine to provide an orgiastic crescendo of sensory components.

Riedel WineWings Glasses, from $35
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Hard Strong 7-Ounce Stackable Glasses

Made in Japan since 1967 and strengthened through an Ion-Exchange process, these glasses are compact, stackable, and ultra-durable. They’re often used for hot tea in ramen shops, but they function just as well with a weeknight Montepulciano d’Abruzzo (or a thumb of whiskey). Bonus: A six-pack of these costs less than a single Riedel!

Hard Strong stackable glasses, 6 for $33
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North Drinkware Glasses

Glass half-empty or half-full is not what we’re mulling with this smart series of tumblers, which features relief sculptures of prominent mountains in the base. What better way to contemplate the heights you’ll reach in the year ahead than to drain a dram with heft like this?

North Drinkware Tumblers, from $48
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Corning Pyrex Erlenmeyer “Decanter”

Go ahead, drop $300 on a fancy blown-glass decanter. That’s blown money, once it meets the edge of an elbow after the third bottle of the night. We’ll be drinking the money we saved by using this dirt-cheap and durable Pyrex surrogate, which is made for the lab but works damn well enough on wine, too. It’s food safe, brand-new, and best of all cheaper than most wine we’d recommend.

Corning Pyrex Erlenmeyer Flask, $24.37
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Coravin Wine-Preservation Systems

Previous models of this system injected inert Argon gas through the cork via hypodermic needle, pushing wine back out and preserving the delicate juice inside. That’s fine for sipping your way through $800 bottles of cult cab, but for the average drinker just looking to prolong something pretty damn good, or maybe to work through a few bottles in a night without the pressure of draining them, this system is a life-saver. Instead of punching through the cork, you’ll swap on grommeted rubber necks after the cork is removed. The result: Four weeks versus a few days of post-cork longevity—and zero opener’s remorse.

Coravin Systems, from $99
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NewAir Wine Refrigerators

Consider a dual-zone compact wine fridge like NewAir’s—perfect for cramped kitchens.

NewAir Wine Fridges, from $120