The dramatic way to open champagne.
October 30, 2001 10:22 AM Subscribe
posted by Carol Anne at 10:41 AM on October 30, 2001
http://www.flyingcracker.com/cocktail/sabering.html
I'd never heard anything like this before - sounds cool.
posted by Qubit at 10:49 AM on October 30, 2001
posted by bob bisquick at 10:49 AM on October 30, 2001
We did this at my residential college's graduation party. (We had lots of champagne, and lots of open space with few breakables.)
The technique doesn't require a fancy special-purpose sabre, just a good, strong, heavy knife (a 10" chef's knife should suffice).
Dan's champagne-slicing quick-reference:
- Hold the bottle (in your non-dominant hand) pointing away from you and tilted upward about 30°.
- Hold the knife in your dominant hand, level with the horizon, blade away from you. Place the flat of the knife on the surface of the bottle (on or around the label).
- In one smooth, firm, confident motion (believe me, this helps), sweep the knife down the length of the bottle, maintaining bottle contact the entire way. Imagine that you will slice cleanly through the neck of the bottle, because this is what will (hopefully) occur.
The pressure of the champagne is focused on a weak point in the glass of the neck of the bottle, and it (the neck) will split along invisible lines of cleavage. You'll be left with some champagne on the ground, the bottle neck somewhere across the room, and a bottle of champagne ending in an elliptical conic section, ready to be poured out to your admiring friends.
You are to hold me blameless for any injury or other damage caused by use of this technique. Consider yourself warned.
posted by dsandl at 10:49 AM on October 30, 2001 [1 favorite]
I say, what the hell. It's your champagne, do what you want with it.
But that drinking-from-a-shoe bit just seems gross. Who the hell thought of that?
posted by yesster at 11:17 AM on October 30, 2001
posted by starvingartist at 11:25 AM on October 30, 2001
posted by Postroad at 11:27 AM on October 30, 2001
You know what Dom Perignon first said to an assistant when he discovered champagne by accident? "Come quickly; I am tasting stars!"
posted by alumshubby at 11:29 AM on October 30, 2001
posted by nprigoda at 11:38 AM on October 30, 2001
posted by mmarcos at 11:43 AM on October 30, 2001
posted by UncleFes at 11:52 AM on October 30, 2001
posted by jonnyp at 12:12 PM on October 30, 2001
But isn't Champagne just mediocre wine showing off?
<ducking the cork barrage />
posted by dchase at 12:19 PM on October 30, 2001
posted by dhartung at 4:04 PM on October 30, 2001
posted by Doug at 7:00 PM on October 30, 2001
posted by rwkenyon at 7:05 AM on October 31, 2001 [1 favorite]
posted by MrMoonPie at 11:37 PM on November 24, 2001
This thread has been archived and is closed to new comments
posted by girlhacker at 10:39 AM on October 30, 2001