I am certainly not a purist who will drink only from the best. Many casual drinkers are happy these days to use inexpensive goblets or even stemless glasses, which I would not seek out, though I am happy enough on occasion to drink wine from a tumbler.Ĭhoosing wine glasses is a little like selecting a car: Even the least-expensive vehicle will get you where you want to go, but the trip is a different experience in the finest Mercedes-Benz. Most wine drinkers, admittedly, will neither want nor need such rarefied glasses. ![]() Over most of the last decade the top glass among wine lovers was the Zalto Denk’Art Universal, which, when I first encountered it in 2011, seemed fundamentally different and radically better than the other leading glasses.īut in the last few years several other high-end glasses have been challenging Zalto’s supremacy, which brought me to these five lead-free crystal universal glasses, each precisely designed (and marketed) to be the only glass anybody would need to drink every sort of wine.Īnybody, that is, willing to pay the roughly $60 to $90 price per glass. But I’ve been pouring wine into five of the best wine glasses money can buy. ![]() The bottles have been no different - they are the usual mix depending on regions, grapes and producers I’m curious about and articles I’m working on, with the occasional treat. For the last couple of months I’ve been drinking luxuriously.
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