I've Been a Sommelier for 9 Years. A Client Just Showed Me Something That Made Me Question Everything.
A device that does in 3 seconds what I've spent years teaching people to do with a decanter. Here's what happened when I tested it myself.
I need to be honest about something.
Last month, a client brought a device to one of my private tasting sessions. He set it on the table next to a $22 bottle of Malbec and said, "I want you to try something."
I've been in the wine industry for 9 years. I've worked harvest in Napa. I passed my Court of Master Sommeliers Level 2 on the first attempt. I've taught hundreds of people how to properly aerate and serve wine.
So when he attached this little gadget to the bottle and pressed a button, I was... polite. But skeptical.
Then he poured me a glass.
And I sat there, quietly, trying to figure out how a $22 Malbec was showing me this much complexity.
What I Tasted
The tannins were soft. Not young-wine-soft where they're just absent - properly integrated soft, the kind you get after 30-45 minutes in a decanter. The mid-palate had structure. The fruit wasn't just "red fruit" - I could pick apart the dark cherry from the plum. The finish lingered.
This was not a $22 wine experience. This was a $50-60 wine experience.
I asked him to pour me a glass straight from the same bottle, without the device. He did.
Night and day. The straight pour was flat, closed off, tannic. Exactly what you'd expect from a young, inexpensive Malbec that hasn't been given any air.
Same bottle. Same glass. Two completely different wines.
The device was called the Sorso Wine Aerator. I took it home that night and spent the next week testing it on everything in my cellar.
What I Found (Professionally Speaking)
Here's what I can tell you as someone who tastes wine for a living:
The aeration is legitimate. It's not a gimmick. The Sorso's micro-aeration chamber produces results that are, in my professional assessment, equivalent to 30-50 minutes of traditional decanting. On young reds, the difference is dramatic. On aged reds, it's more subtle but still noticeable. On whites - and this surprised me - it opens up aromatics I wouldn't normally expect without chilling and swirling.
I tested it across 14 bottles over one week:
| What I Tested | Sorso (3 sec) | Decanter (45 min) | Straight Pour |
|---|---|---|---|
| Young Malbec ($22) | ✓ Excellent | Comparable | Closed, tannic |
| Napa Cab ($65) | ✓ Excellent | Slightly better | Tight, needs air |
| Côtes du Rhône ($18) | ✓ Excellent | Comparable | Muted, flat |
| NZ Sauvignon Blanc ($16) | ✓ Noticeable lift | N/A | Fine but restrained |
| Aged Barolo ($120) | Good - subtle | Preferred | Needs air |
For bottles under $50, the Sorso consistently matched or came close to a proper decant. For expensive aged wines, I'd still recommend a decanter when time allows. But here's the honest truth: 95% of wine consumed at home is under $30, and nobody decants those. That's exactly where the Sorso excels.
The Preservation Changed My Mind Even More
The aeration impressed me. The preservation is what made me recommend it.
After pouring, the Sorso creates a vacuum seal inside the bottle. I tested this by opening a $24 Côtes du Rhône, pouring one glass, then sealing it with the Sorso. I tasted it again at day 3, day 7, day 14, and day 21.
At day 14, I could not detect meaningful degradation. By day 21, there was minor change - a slight softening of fruit. But it was still a perfectly enjoyable glass of wine.
Compare that to a normal opened bottle, which starts turning by day 2 and is undrinkable by day 4.
Who This Is Actually For
I'm going to be direct. If you're a collector with a wine fridge full of Grand Cru Burgundy, you should keep decanting. The ritual is part of the experience for those bottles.
But if you're someone who:
- Drinks wine 3-5 nights a week at home
- Usually buys bottles in the $15-40 range
- Doesn't own a decanter (or owns one that collects dust)
- Has poured unfinished bottles down the drain
- Wants wine to taste better without learning more about wine
The Sorso is the single biggest upgrade you can make. I mean that as a professional.
What My Colleagues Are Saying
After I tested it, I asked three other sommeliers in my network to try it blind. Their reactions:
"I poured the same wine two ways for a table of six. Every single person chose the Sorso glass as the 'better wine.' All six. Same bottle."
"I was ready to dismiss this as another gadget. The aeration on young reds is genuinely comparable to 30+ minutes in a decanter. I now keep one at the restaurant for by-the-glass service."
"I recommend it to every client who tells me they 'don't really know about wine.' It makes wine appreciation instant instead of intimidating."
My Honest Assessment
I've spent 9 years teaching people how to taste, serve, and appreciate wine. The knowledge matters - I still believe that.
But I also know that 99% of the people reading this will never take a sommelier course. They just want their Tuesday night glass of wine to taste better. And for that, the Sorso does more in 3 seconds than I can teach in a 2-hour class.
It's not replacing wine education. It's making the benefits of wine education available to everyone, instantly, without the education.
That's not a threat to my profession. That's the whole point of my profession.
Try It for 90 Days
Sorso offers a 90-day guarantee. If it doesn't change your wine experience, return it. Full refund. Their return rate is under 2%.
40% OFF + Free Gifts
Cheers - Ava 🍷