Kitchen

Raisin the bar: this trick puts the fizz back into Champagne

Don’t pour those half-drunk bottles of flat sparkling wine down this sink
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This neat trick using a pantry staple will restore bubbles to Champagne in seconds.

From office parties to boozy brunches and afternoon catch-ups with the girls, Champagne and celebrations go hand in hand. And while you never need to convince us to raise a glass or two, sometimes we tend to end up with more half-drunk bottles of bubbly lying around. 

How to put the fizz back into champagne | Home Beautiful Magazine Australia
(Credit: Getty images)

We’ve all tried the trick of sticking a teaspoon in the open bottle of sparkling before storing it back in the fridge, but a study published in Scientific American found that the old silver spoon method performed no better than simply leaving the bottle uncovered. The same disappointing result was reproduced by a group of researchers at the Interprofessional Committee of Champagne (CIVC) in France.  

Hervé This, a French food journalist, TV presenter and chemist, described the findings in his 2002 book Molecular Gastronomy: Exploring the Science of Flavor, saying, “The pressure in bottles opened and left open or in bottles opened and left open with a spoon decreased in the same way, whereas a stopper or cork prevented the gas escape.” 

So how do you breathe new life into a limp bottle of fizz? Short of resorting to Cheryl Marshall’s SodaStream wizardry for turning still wine into sparkling, The Sun in the UK has reported on a neat trick for restoring the bubbles in a bottle of flat Champagne.  

How to put the fizz back into champagne | Home Beautiful Magazine Australia
(Credit: Getty images)

Apparently, all you have to do is drop a raisin into your bottle of Champagne, sparkling wine, prosecco or cava – any CO2that’s left in the wine will cling to the ridged surface of the raisin and release fresh bubbles. But you must act fast as the effect is short-lived, so pour yourself that glass as soon as you see bubbles start to rise from the raisin.

Bottoms up!

 

This article originally appeared on Foodiful.

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