While I'm at it, here's another one I'm throwing into the Hornet's nest:
Double Decanting is an over-rated, antiquated practice that in almost all circumstances should be avoided (especially for old wines).
I hate it when so-called wine experts automatically double decant old wines without a second thought (or more specifically, no thought at all). Too many times I have seen a perfectly good wine (usually mine that I checked in advance) totally ruined by someone who think they are doing the right thing (usually against my protest) by a double decant. The usual reason is to remove the sediment - fine, if they want to do that, a single gentle decant should be enough, but a double decant back into the original bottle of an old wine for show purposes is just asking for trouble...
Case 1: I took my last bottle of 2002 Penfolds Cellar Reserve Grenache to Penfolds Magill Estate Kitchen at a BYO Sunday, the Sommelier (with an Italian background) said he would bring the bottle to the table after looking after it (which I assumed he meant just removing the cork and checking it was sound). He looked after it allright...
He brought it to the table for me to check the glass, said he had double decanted it and wanted to know if it needed another to give it more breathing time - needless to say the wine was completely oxidized and I was furious, Gordon Ramsay ape shit furious...
"ARE YOU F*CKING SERIOUS? THIS IS A F*CKING 15 YEAR OLD BAROSSA GRENACHE, NOT F*CKING BAROLO! YOU KILLED IT, YOU BURIED IT, YOU DANCED ON IT'S GRAVE, DUG IT UP, AND NOW YOU WANT TO KILL IT AGAIN?"
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The damage had been done, nothing could be fixed and everyone could see how gutted and pissed off I was that something like this could happen at such a place. Obviously the staff applied the Max Schubert story of double decanting Grange automatically to every Penfolds red without even checking, regardless of how old and fragile the wine could be - you think they should know better...
The next time there I took my last bottle of 1996 Magill Estate Shiraz, and one of the senior cellar door staff suggested a double decant - this time I was on the lookout and politely said
no way. It was opened and checked, was in perfect condition, and taken straight to the table. The wine was outstanding, senior staff who came over to try it remarked how fresh it and how good it was hours after it had been opened, especially compared to what they had tried at the recent clinics - also, after standing up overnight there was virtually no sediment in the wine, it was all stuck to the bottle and there was no need for a decant in the first place. Case closed.
Double decanting should only be applied to the youngest and most rebellious of wines where the nose is closed up tighter than a tadpole's asshole, or reeks of such heavily charred oak or sulphur that there's basically nothing to lose by giving it such a brutal rush of air to get it going. If you are remotely thinking of doing this with an old wine, try the damn thing first - if it's already good, leave it alone!
That said, I do like Jamie's idea of the half-decanter where half the wine is poured into a smaller vessel for assessment, if it is still closed and needs more air the remainder can be poured into a full sized decanter, you get the same effect but in a far more controlled/judged manner. The same can basically applied partway through a double decant process - try it when it is in decanter, if that's all it needs then don't risk the return to the washed bottle. It's much better than the pissing-in-the-wind approach of a brainless automatic double decant.
Rant over.
Ian
Forget about goodness and mercy, they're gone.