Wine Thermals. Mine is plain brown. |
In the few months since I got a Wine Thermal, I've used it every time I had a white wine. I can't say that for any other wine gadget in the house. (I've moved away from fancy corkscrew devices and am using a very basic model.)
It's attractive, effective and extremely low-tech. I like it so much I feel the need to say that nobody is paying me to write this. In fact, it's going to be a welcome surprise for the Montana-based company.
The Wine Thermal is a block of concrete with a wine bottle-shaped hole in it. You store it in the freezer. When it's time to serve a white wine, you put the concrete block on the table, and put the bottle in it. Simple as that.
The Thermal keeps the wine at a steady, cool temperature more effectively than an ice bucket. With an ice bucket, you always have to worry about overchilling, so you're constantly moving the dripping bottle in and out of the ice bath. You can just leave it, dry, in the Thermal. It keeps the bottle cool for at least 90 minutes; I haven't asked longer of it than that. While it does leave a little condensation on the table, it's a whole lot neater than an ice bucket.
It's a simple, elegant device that you can use every day; it gives your dinner table a touch of the trendy urban industrial-restaurant look. When you're done with the wine, you put it back in the freezer.
I was waiting for it to be available on Amazon, so I could reap 4% of the sales from any click-throughs, but two months have passed since I got it and I'm still using it all the time, so what the heck. You have to order it (for $65 plus $5 shipping) directly from the Montana-based company, Angle 33. Here's their website.
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great idea, but $70 for a colored concrete block with a hole in it, quikcrete here I come
ReplyDeleteYou must have the skills to pay the bills. I grant you that DIY is a great way to go with this sort of thing, but if I were to try to make one myself, the emergency room copay alone would probably exceed $70.
ReplyDeleteWineskillguy, all you have to do is drive to home depot, get a bag of quikrete that has way more than you need in it, go get some coloring agent (wherever you get that) and pick up a piece of plywood or whatever material you might use to make a mold for this thing and some screws or glue to keep it together. Then come up with something to make the hole in the middle or some tool to drill the hole with. Then mix your quikrete and the coloring agent, pour it into the mold you just made and let it sit until cured. Then store the rest of the quikrete and coloring agent (close by) because you are going to need it when your DIY wine chiller looks like crap because the cement reacted with what you used to make the mold out of. No problem though, just repeat steps 1-5 until you have one mediocre looking, yet usable wine chiller that you spent a lot of time making and way more than $70 on when you could have just bought one. Just saying...
ReplyDeleteDo chubby Champagne bottles fit inside?
ReplyDeleteAnd I agree, $70 is steep! There are marble wine coolers on Amazon for less than half this price!