Sabrage: Becoming the Life of Any Party

by Chris HallowellFebruary 12, 2008

Sabrage is an age-old practice started by Napoleon’s officers when they would ride into town after laying the proverbial ‘pimp-hand’ upon their opposition. The town’s people would reward them with a bottle of Champagne. Preoccupied with riding a horse, the officer would simply draw his sword and lop off the top of the bottle. So from Napoleon to your living room, here is a step-by-step approach to Sabrage.

Sabrage Step 1
Step 1: Grab a bottle of sparkling.

Sabrage Step 2
Step 2: Remove all the foil covering the cork.

Sabrage Step 3
Step 3: Unscrew and remove the muselet (wire capsule around the cork)

Sabrage Step 4
Step 4: Find one of the two seams running the length of the bottle. Bottles are made from two halves so where they meet and join with the lip of the bottle is the weakest point.

Sabrage Step 5
Step 5: Align the blade of a moderately heavy knife with the seam pointing the blunt end of the knife forward.

Sabrage Step 6
Step 6: Thrust the knife towards the point where the lip of the bottle and the seam meet (the weakest point of the bottle). Follow through with your stroke and await your accolades from your adoring fans as the top of the bottle shears off cleanly.

2 Responses
The Dangers of Sabrage | The Second Glass
March 10, 2008 at 10:12 am
2 Responses
Chris Biele February 14, 2008 at 11:55 pm

Nice tut. Hey, didn’t you guys steal this from MAKE? ;)

Leave a Comment

Previous post:

Next post: