Many people assume a decanter is a universal upgrade for any bottle of alcohol, but for most whiskies, that beautiful glass vessel will actually degrade the flavor within a few weeks, not improve it. The real answer to what to put in a decanter isn’t just about looking good on a bar cart; it’s about understanding aeration and oxidation. The unequivocal winner for true flavor enhancement is high-tannin red wines and certain fortified wines, which genuinely benefit from a controlled exposure to air.
Defining the Decanter’s Role: Aesthetics vs. Function
Before you pour, it’s crucial to distinguish between using a decanter for aesthetic presentation and using it for its functional purpose. For some spirits, a decanter is purely a stylish vessel for serving, offering little to no flavor benefit. For others, particularly red wines, it’s a critical tool for improving the drinking experience.
- Functional Decanting: This is for beverages that benefit from aeration, allowing them to “breathe.” Oxygen exposure can soften harsh tannins, release trapped aromas, and help complex flavors develop.
- Aesthetic Decanting: This is primarily for presentation. Many spirits look elegant in a decanter, and it allows for easy pouring, but the decanter itself won’t fundamentally change their character for the better over time.
The Real Winners: What Truly Benefits from Decanting
When you’re looking for genuine flavor improvement, these are your primary candidates:
High-Tannin Red Wines
This is the classic, undisputed champion. Young, robust red wines with high tannin levels often taste tight, harsh, or closed-off when first opened. Decanting them allows oxygen to interact with the wine:
- Softens Tannins: The oxygen helps polymerize the tannins, making the wine feel smoother and less astringent on the palate.
- Opens Aromas: It encourages the wine to release its full aromatic bouquet, revealing complex fruit, spice, and earthy notes that might have been subdued in the bottle.
- Removes Sediment: For older wines, decanting separates the clear wine from any sediment that has accumulated over time.
Examples: Cabernet Sauvignon, Syrah/Shiraz, Bordeaux blends, Malbec, Nebbiolo (Barolo, Barbaresco), Tempranillo (Rioja). These wines can often benefit from 30 minutes to several hours of decanting, depending on their age and intensity.
Vintage Port & Sherry
Certain fortified wines, especially vintage ports, can benefit immensely from decanting. Like aged red wines, vintage port develops sediment over decades and needs to be carefully separated. Aeration also helps to open up its rich, complex layers of dried fruit, nut, and spice aromas.
Examples: Vintage Port (especially 10+ years old), some older Sherries (like Amontillado or Oloroso) that have been bottled unfiltered.
What to Put in a Decanter for Presentation (With Caveats)
For spirits, decanting is almost always about presentation or very short-term aeration, not long-term storage or dramatic flavor transformation. If you’re using a decanter for these, ensure it has a tight-fitting stopper and understand the timeline.
- Whiskey/Whisky: Most whiskies (Bourbon, Scotch, Irish Whiskey) can be decanted for short periods (a few days to a couple of weeks) without significant harm, and some robust, high-proof whiskies might even benefit from a very brief aeration to soften their edge. However, prolonged exposure to air will cause delicate flavors to dissipate and can lead to a flat, dull profile.
- Rum: Similar to whiskey, rum can be decanted for presentation. Avoid long-term storage in anything but its original bottle, especially for aged, complex rums, to prevent flavor loss.
- Gin & Vodka: These spirits generally don’t benefit from aeration. Decanting them is purely for aesthetic purposes. As they are often consumed chilled or mixed, any minimal flavor change from brief aeration is unlikely to be noticed.
The Decanting Myths: What Not to Put in a Decanter
This is where many common practices go wrong. Not everything belongs in a decanter, especially for extended periods.
- Lighter-Bodied, Older, or Delicate Red Wines: Over-aerating delicate wines (like older Pinot Noir, Burgundy, or some Grenache) can strip them of their subtle nuances and cause them to “fall apart” quickly. These often benefit more from simply opening the bottle and letting it sit for a short while, or using a decanter for sediment removal only, pouring immediately after.
- Most White Wines: With rare exceptions (e.g., some aged Chardonnay or Riesling), white wines generally do not need or benefit from decanting. Their delicate aromatics can be lost with excessive air exposure.
- Most Spirits for Long-Term Storage: This is the big one. Unless your decanter is hermetically sealed (most are not), the constant exposure to air will slowly degrade the spirit. Alcohol will evaporate, and delicate esters and aromatics will oxidize and disappear, leaving a duller, less vibrant product. This applies to most whiskies, rums, brandies, and other spirits you want to preserve for more than a few weeks.
- Liqueurs: These are typically stable and often have high sugar content, which means they don’t need aeration. Decanting is purely for display.
Practical Tips for Decanter Use
- Cleanliness is Key: Always ensure your decanter is impeccably clean and dry to avoid imparting off-flavors.
- Know Your Stopper: If using for spirits, a tight-fitting glass stopper is essential, but even then, it’s not truly airtight.
- Timing is Everything: Research the specific wine or spirit to understand its ideal decanting time. Err on the side of less time rather than more for most spirits.
- Don’t Overfill: Leave some air space for the liquid to breathe.
Final Verdict
For genuine flavor enhancement and sediment removal, the clear winner for what to put in a decanter is aged, high-tannin red wines. For aesthetic presentation, robust spirits like whiskey or rum can work, but for short periods only. The one-line takeaway: Decant to improve, not just to display, and always know your timeline.