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🎧 Discovering Wine’s True Potential
Podcast Sales and Marketing / PodCast / Feb 10, 2026 / Posted by Michael Fors / 1

🎧 Discovering Wine’s True Potential

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Most people who dislike red wine have never actually tasted it properly. Michael Fors, founder of Liquid Jazz, explains how a simple walk along the Gloucester shoreline changed everything he knew about wine aeration.

Watching water cascade over rocks, Fors realized wine needs the same natural movement to reveal its best qualities. His patented decanter features stepped ridges that maximize oxygen exposure—just four minutes of gentle rocking transforms harsh, closed wines into smooth, complex experiences.

The difference is remarkable. Sulfites dissipate, tannins soften, and alcohol burn mellows without changing the wine itself. Side-by-side tastings convert skeptics instantly.

Ready to revolutionize your wine ritual? Visit liquidjazzexperience.com and discover what you’ve been missing.

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About Author

Michael A. Fors didn’t set out to build a business; he set out to solve a problem at his own table. For more than two decades, he’s gathered friends for “wine night,” a Thursday ritual that has seen everything from two people sharing a bottle by the fire to fifty guests filling his yard with music, food, and conversation. Those nights brought joy, but also had a sticking point: red wines often tasted harsh when first opened, and waiting hours for a decanter was impractical when cars kept pulling into the driveway. The turning point came at the Gloucester shoreline, where Michael watched waves roll over rocks, breaking open the air with the scent of sea salt and seaweed. He imagined wine flowing the same way, over contours that would naturally open it. A prototype made with a local metalworker proved the idea right: wine softened in minutes. That sketch of an idea became Liquid Jazz, the first patented decanter designed to bring out a bottle’s best character in four minutes. Today, Michael speaks less as an inventor and more as a host. He shows how design can preserve the ceremony of wine without the wait, how a decanter can be as much an event piece at the table as a tool, and how traditions evolve when they’re shaped by the communities that keep them alive. In restaurants, Liquid Jazz helps sommeliers turn overlooked bottles into memorable features. At home, it sits on the bar like an art piece, ready to turn an ordinary evening into something worth lingering over.

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About Author

Michael A. Fors didn’t set out to build a business; he set out to solve a problem at his own table. For more than two decades, he’s gathered friends for “wine night,” a Thursday ritual that has seen everything from two people sharing a bottle by the fire to fifty guests filling his yard with music, food, and conversation. Those nights brought joy, but also had a sticking point: red wines often tasted harsh when first opened, and waiting hours for a decanter was impractical when cars kept pulling into the driveway. The turning point came at the Gloucester shoreline, where Michael watched waves roll over rocks, breaking open the air with the scent of sea salt and seaweed. He imagined wine flowing the same way, over contours that would naturally open it. A prototype made with a local metalworker proved the idea right: wine softened in minutes. That sketch of an idea became Liquid Jazz, the first patented decanter designed to bring out a bottle’s best character in four minutes. Today, Michael speaks less as an inventor and more as a host. He shows how design can preserve the ceremony of wine without the wait, how a decanter can be as much an event piece at the table as a tool, and how traditions evolve when they’re shaped by the communities that keep them alive. In restaurants, Liquid Jazz helps sommeliers turn overlooked bottles into memorable features. At home, it sits on the bar like an art piece, ready to turn an ordinary evening into something worth lingering over.

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