It said, 'No wine for you... unless you open up!"
I used a corkscrew to open the bottle. I did a corkscrew in the water when I was swimming.
As long as you a want. As long as she a say yes and a bottle of wine.
Une bouteille de vin rouge
I remember a friend had a wine bottle opener that inserted a hollow needle through the cork into the air space above the wine. Then the user worked a small pump above the bottle's cork. As pressure inside the bottle built, the cork began to rise out of the bottle. I had a cork crumble when I tried to use a corkscrew extractor. I attached a longer than normal inflation needle to a tankless air compressor. What was left of the cork popped right out without leaving any crumbled cork in the wine. So, I made a long inflation needle for a bicycle tire pump and tried it out on a new bottle of wine with a full length synthetic cork. The bicycle pump has a pressure gauge. The pressure registered 80 psi. just before the cork began to come out quite speedily. This was a standard glass wine bottle, not a bottle for champagne or sparkling wine. I looked around the Internet and found some have conducted tests and determined a 2 liter (plastic) soft drink bottle will burst around 120 psi. I would think a normal glass wine bottle would be stronger than a plastic 2 liter soft drink bottle.
In Dutch or "in het Nederlands" you would say - "Een fles witte wijn en twee glazen tevreden" …. which means a bottle of white wine and two glasses please
au cinéma avec une bouteille de vin
u can check on the back of the bottle where it has ingredients then u will find SUGAR n it will say
In German or "auf Deutsch" you would say - "Eine Flasche Weißwein und zwei Gläser bitte" …. which means a bottle of white wine and two glasses please.
If you just recork it I'd say you have up to 2 days after opening to drink it. That said, there are some interesting gadgets out there that can help you keep wine longer. One of which is a spray where a harmless gas goes in and protects the wine. Another will suck the air out of the wine bottle. There are quite a few things out there that can help. In both cases it protects wine from air, which is what causes wine to spoil.
I would say that the average wine would cost about $30 - $40. The older the wine, the more it will cost, mainly because the older it is the better it tastes because it settles. It also depends where you buy the wine from, some places may rip you off. Cheap wine, OFTEN does not taste very nice. The expensiver you get, the better if probably would taste. But I try to stick to about $50.
THEY SAY ABOUT 10 GLASSES, DEPENDING ON THE SIZE OF THE GLASS AND THE POUR OF COURSE.