People 1 minute 02 March 2018

5 Tips From Patrick Cournot On How to Store Wine In a Small Apartment

Have a ton of wine but no space to store them properly? Here are five tips to build a mighty wine collection in the smallest of spaces.

Storing wines can be a tricky affair in space-starved Singapore, where most people live in tiny apartments that are worlds apart from French châteaux with basement wine cellars. However, all's not lost—there are ways to maximise space to keep your tipples in tip-top condition.

Patrick Cournot, the owner and sommelier behind Ruffian, a teensy wine bar in New York City's East Village neighborhood, knows this firsthand. Ruffian’s narrow digs has room only for a dozen or so seats along its landing strip of a bar. Cournot lives across the river in Brooklyn, land of pint-sized apartments, and is well-versed in creative stockpiling solutions. If anyone can fit wine storage in small spaces, it’s him.

Curious about how to make wine collecting work in cramped quarters? Here are some of Cournot’s spot-on tips.
OwnerPatrickCournotJenniferHull (1).jpg
1. Keep wine bottles out of the kitchen. 
Plenty of well-meaning oenophiles stash bottles in their kitchens, but it’s one of the worst possible places to store wine. “That’s the room that will get the hottest of all the rooms in your apartment,” says Cournot. Heat essentially cooks the wine and can turn it bitter in a relatively short period of time.
Cournot recalls a friend who once made the tragic mistake of keeping six (expensive) bottles of Bordeaux and Rioja Reserve in the cabinet directly over her stove for three whole years: “She opened one bottle and it was awful. They had this sweet heavy prune flavour. It tasted like prune syrup!”

2. Lay bottles flat when possible.
The wine bottle cork can shrink if it gets too cold or too dry. When this happens, oxygen can get inside the bottle and dull the wine’s flavour, eventually turning it bitter. One way to combat shrinkage? Lay your bottles flat. “Liquid is touching cork, so it’s not going to dry out,” explains Cournot.

3. Rethink the refrigerator.   
Storing wine in the fridge for a few days is fine, but you’re asking for trouble if you keep bottles in there for longer periods. “It’s quite dry in a normal fridge, and the corks will shrink,” says Cournot. “It’s not a good place to leave bottles for half a year or longer.” Instead, invest in a wine refrigerator that fits easily into an apartment and goes easy on your budget.

4. Don’t let the light in.   
"Light is the worst enemy of wine,” says Cournot. Even if a cork is plugged in tight, ultraviolet rays found in sunlight can prematurely age and taint a vintage. The lighter the wine and the more transparent the bottle, the more susceptible the wine is. The solution? Store wine in a dark place, and if that’s not a possibility, “it’s not that hard to throw a towel over it."

5. The hall closet is your friend.

“The hallway closet is the perfect spot to put a bottle of wine," says Cournet. It is likely the most temperature-stable place in your apartment, and the closet door is a built-in light reducer. It's even better if a closet has a shelf built at eye level, as keeping wine in an easy-to-reach place means you’re more likely to drink it.

“If you have anything that’s being stored for months at a time, you’re not going to remember what you have,” says Cournot, adding that he has seen plenty of bottles “wind up in Never Never Land.”


SEE MORE: Click here for more Wine stories 


This article first appeared on Robert Parker Wine Advocate in February 2017. Click here to read the original story. 

People

Keep Exploring - Stories we think you will enjoy reading

Select check-in date
Rates in USD for 1 night, 1 guest