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18 set 2021 · Raise a Glass to Love: Directed by David Weaver. With Laura Osnes, Juan Pablo Di Pace, Matthew James Dowden, Eric Keenleyside. Follows aspiring Master Sommelier Jenna who returns to her family vineyard to study and is fascinated by the natural methods of the new winemaker, Marcelo.
- (1K)
- David Weaver
- TV-G
- Comedy, Drama, Romance
8 ago 2022 · Nobody does a film about wine as well as the French do. In the same way that (almost!) nobody makes delicious wine as the French do. Get your glass of Burgundy red, or Chablis, ready to discover how three siblings manage to reconnect after their father’s passing.
14 mag 2022 · Revenge Best Served Chilled: Directed by Dylan Vox. With Lynn Kim Do, Monique Parent, Michael Swan, Micavrie Amaia. Eager to become a sommelier, blogger Emily (Lynn Kim Do) applies to join a competitive wine academy, just like her late mother did years ago.
- Dylan Vox
- 1
- 2 min
24 gen 2017 · 334. 65K views 7 years ago. Occasionally your wine can fall victim to microbial problems including film yeast or mold that shows itself in the form of white film or white powder on or in your...
- 4 min
- 66K
- The Home Winemaking Channel
- Other Names For ‘Wine Legs’
- How to Assess Wine Legs
- What’s Actually Happening with Wine legs?
Tears of WineChurch WindowsGibbs-Marangoni EffectBefore swirling your glass hold the wine at an angle to let it flow up one side of the glass. Next, level the glass and see how the wine flows (viscosity) and observe the density of the legs that form. If you see a lot of legs, you can guess that the wine is higher alcohol, which you can taste as a warming/burning sensation in the back of your thro...
When you swirl your wine you create a thin film of wine on the surface of the glass. As the alcohol in this mixture evaporates (creating wine aromas), the leftover water-wine mix collects on the sides of the glass creating droplets that fall back into the glass. By the way, if you have a closed bottle of wine and you shake it, you’ll notice that th...
22 of our favorite wine movies, including documentaries unveiling wine's mysteries and beautifully shot fictional stories.
The phenomenon called tears of wine (French: Larmes de vin; German: Kirchenfenster, lit. "church windows") is manifested as a ring of clear liquid, near the top of a glass of wine, from which droplets continuously form and drop back into the wine.