Fine wine deserves to be served in fine stemware, but sooner or later, we suffer breakage, need volume or are tempted by flea–market finds. If you know quality, you can score bargains from obscure sources. But going second-hand or searching out volume value doesn’t mean you have to sacrifice quality, if you follow these steps.
First, look at a glass.
Turn it carefully against the light. It should begin-clear from bowl to foot. Any hint of green means low-grade bottle glass—move on. Colored stems are acceptable, if somewhat passé. Etching and engraving are for antiques only.
The lip should be flat—sheared, as if cut with scissors—for a crisp, clean pour.
The too-common bulbous rim is sometimes labeled a “safety edge,” but that’s a marketing dodge used to disguise cheap manufacture. It’s a hallmark of cafeteria-grade glassware.
Next, hold an audition: literally listen to the glass.
Rap the bowl sharply at the equator with a knuckle or a cork. (I use a felt hammer salvaged from a junked piano.) A pleasing bell-like tone should last several seconds—a lingering finish. My luckiest flea-market find, a Riedel Burgundy Grand Cru, emits a lovely low gong for 20 seconds. But if you hear a brief, metallic clink? Pass.
If the glass satisfies these absolutes, proceed to more subjective criteria like heft.
The glass should be agreeably light and well balanced, not “bowl heavy.” Such glasses are spill-prone, as are those with small footprints. Stability requires a foot that’s nearly as wide as the bowl. Make sure the stem is elegantly slim, but not so skinny to be unduly fragile. Pulled-stem or “drawn” glasses are made in one elegant piece. “Pieced” glasses show a joint where the stem and bowl have been fused together, and they may equal pulled stems at significantly lower prices.
By Bill Marsano, Winemag