(858) 450-9557

9550 Waples Street, Suite 115
San Diego, California, 92121
360° Tour of WineSellar

  Reservations  Newsletter   Map  Rush Hour Map  Photo Gallery

Hand Me a Screw Cap Bottle, Please!

Gary Parker, Owner
The WineSellar & Brasserie

I was just doing some math . . . 

I open bottles of wine everyday, as I sample wines for my business, and have wine every evening with dinner. In addition to this, I have put on a few thousand wine tastings, special culinary events, as well as various parties, celebrations and wine dinners. Add in serving lunch and dinner in restaurants I have worked in or owned, I can easily say I have opened an average of 10 bottles of wine a day.

I have been in the wine and restaurant business in San Diego for 42 years now. At ten bottles a day for forty-two years, I figure I have opened about 153,300 bottles of wine during my career in this industry.

If you stood these 153,300 bottles up side by side, you would have an nine-mile long row of wine bottles. If you laid them down end to end, you’re looking at a thirty-six mile trail of opened wine bottles.

It now takes me an average of 20 seconds to open each wine (I just opened another to qualify this remark). This means I have spent 51,100 minutes opening wine, 852 hours in total. With an eight-hour workday, this tally’s up to one hundred-six days of work doing nothing but taking corks out of bottles of wine.

The wine experts claim up to 5% of all bottled wine is ruined by cork taint. If that is the case, then I have opened up 7.665 of bottles that were contaminated by cork bacteria, “corked” as we call it.

Can someone hand me a screw cap bottle, please?

 Folks, screw cap wine bottles are really cool. Yes, historically, screw cap bottles generally signified a wine of a lesser and often inferior quality, but that image is diminishing rapidly among consumers. Literally, hundreds of top quality wines are now being placed in screw cap enclosures for ease of use, but most importantly to preserve the wine and offer the best, most consistent product possible to the consumer.

 I know that screw caps diminish the drama and romance of opening a bottle of wine. I think that is great, actually. Some of the ‘pomp and circumstance’ surrounding the use of table wine should be dropped to allow easier social accessibility. Take the fear and mystery of opening a bottle of wine out of the picture, and more people will enjoy and understand the benefits of having wine with meals.

 On my day off, Sunday, I often go to a chain restaurant just to have a dozen or so fresh oysters from their impressive selections. Always ordering a bottle of a fresh, white wine to go with them, I would wince watching our ‘server of the month’ struggle while opening a cork-enclosed wine. More than few times, I ended up taking over the corkscrew to aid in the battle. Now, with ordering a screw cap bottle there, I feel more relaxed, confident and secure the server can readily twist off the cap and pour away.

Corks are still necessary!

 Most all screw cap enclosures are placed on wines not meant for cellaring. 90-95% of wine produced is consumed within its first year of release. Wines like Sauvignon Blanc, Pinot Gris, Pinot Grigio, some Chardonnay, Rose’s, and even some lighter red wines are perfectly suited for easy opening enclosures.

 If you want a wine to place in your cellar to age for a more than a couple years, a cork enclosure is better suited for aging the wine. Cork allows minute amounts of air into the bottle, which assists in the development of the wine.

I recently spent some time with one of the finest winemakers in the world, Luis Barraud, from Vina Cobos in Argentina. His observations about cork enclosures are: “the general public is getting used to the idea of fine bottles of wine are being sold in screw cap nowadays, and certainly anything under $20 retail does not seem to raise an eyebrow.”

I totally agree. Let’s embrace the proper utilization of both screw cap and cork enclosures. Then after we have adjusted to these circumstances, we will be a little more ready to accept the next generation of premium wine containers: wine in a box!  (Yes, I like this, too!)

 

 Fine Dining

Intimate atmosphere, seasonal French menu, fine wines.

Wine Spectator Best of Award of Excellence 2021 Top 100 Restaurants 2022 Spectrum Award diners choice Best Overall

Lunch Menu Dinner Menu Wine Dinners TCS Bar Menu

 

 

Wine Shop

Why Buy Wine at The WineSellar?

 

  • Selection - Quality & Value
  • Service - Expert & Personal
  • Wine Tastings - Try it, Buy it
  • Wine Lockers - Wine Storage
  • Wine Clubs & Wine Gifts

Wine Shop Wine Tastings Wine Lockers

Shop Our Wines Online Here Gift Cards

Hours

Wine Shop, Brasserie & Casual Side Hours

The Brasserie

Tuesday through Friday*
Lunch: 11:30am-2pm
Tuesday through Saturday
Dinner: 5pm-close

*on the days of our bi-monthly wine dinners, the Brasserie is not open for Lunch.

The Casual Side

Tuesday through Friday
Happy Hour 4pm-7pm

WineSellar Shop Hours

Tuesday through Saturday
10:00am - 8:00pm

WineSellar Locker Hours

Tuesday through Saturday
10:00am - 8:00pm