4bartenders.com (for bartenders, those who want to be and other scoundrels)
There are milestones in life when an appropriate way of celebrating one is by popping the top off a nice bottle of champagne or sparkling wine and toasting the accomplishment ...or maybe just having a refreshing mimosa to accompany your Sunday breakfast or brunch ...or a casual Bellini to start the evening off with a little bubbly. While champagne is tasty to drink, the question is what to do with any leftover that you may wish to drink at another time?
The problem is that you can't use the same cork as the champagne bottle's stopper because it is now expanded into a mushroom-shape once you had popped the cork. Trying to substitute another wine cork in the champagne bottle as a stopper may work (or seems like a good idea), but depending on the amount of champagne and its effervescent bubbled gases may eventually push (or pop) that wine cork out and spoil the remnants of the godly elixir.
Enter the champagne bottle stopper!. This is a little relatively inexpensive device that was designed to cap a bottle of sparkling wine without the worry or danger of pressure buildup within the bottle and maintain the bubbly for a few days longer. The stopper also prevents over-aeration and release of bubbles.The basic design of this device are the spring-loaded winged hinges that grab onto the bottle neck to safely secure the top to it.
It's a good idea to have one or two of these around the house ...and if you work at a restaurant, I'd recommend purchasing 3 to 6 of these. It's a small investment to keep the fizz in the bottle and a tickle of bubbles under the nose.
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