A row of empty wine glasses on a dark wood table, soft side-light
Wine Craft — How to Enjoy It

Why the wine glass shape matters

Bordeaux vs Burgundy, white vs sparkling, flute vs tulip — the practical guide to wine glass shapes, with the bare minimum you actually need at home.

Argentina Through Wine · 5 chapters · 7 min read total

In one lineThe shape of the glass changes the wine. The bowl decides how aromas reach your nose; the rim decides where the wine lands on your tongue. Most homes only need two glasses.

Bordeaux vs Burgundy, white vs sparkling, flute vs tulip — the practical guide to wine glass shapes, with the bare minimum you actually need at home.

Five glasses in a row on a long dark wood table, editorial composition
Five glasses, five jobs. But you only need two.
Start Reading — Step 1: What the glass actually does →

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Preguntas frecuentes

Respuestas rápidas

Does the shape of a wine glass really matter?

Yes — measurably. The bowl size controls how much air meets the wine, which changes aromas. The rim shape directs the wine to specific parts of your tongue. And the closed top concentrates aromas at your nose. The same wine tastes genuinely different from different glasses.

What's the difference between a Bordeaux and a Burgundy glass?

Bordeaux glasses are taller with a slightly narrower bowl — built for structured, tannic reds like Cabernet Sauvignon, Malbec and Syrah. Burgundy glasses are shorter with a wider balloon-shaped bowl — built for delicate, aromatic reds like Pinot Noir and Nebbiolo. Same family of glassware, different jobs.

Which glass should I use for Malbec?

A Bordeaux-style glass. Malbec is a structured, tannic red, and the tall narrower bowl directs the wine to the back of the palate where you perceive its richness, while the height of the bowl lets the alcohol vapor dissipate before reaching your nose.

Are flutes still the right glass for Champagne?

Not anymore, according to most Champagne houses. Flutes preserve bubbles but trap aromas at the bottom. A tulip-shaped glass — slightly wider at the bottom, tapered at the top — keeps the bubbles nearly as long while letting the aromas reach your nose. This is what most serious sparkling producers now recommend.

Do I need a different glass for every grape?

No. For most homes, two shapes cover almost everything: a Bordeaux for full-bodied reds and a universal glass for everything else. Grape-specific glasses (Cabernet glass, Pinot glass, etc.) are marginal upgrades. The quality of the rim matters more than the specificity of the shape.