WineSpirit.us - Wine & Spirits

Guide To Tasting Wine


The basics of tasting wine are relatively simple to learn. Once the fundamentals are mastered, the nuances and details can be enhanced over a lifetime. Like any other skill, tasting wine requires practice, and consistency is probably the most important factor.

One helpful strategy an aspiring wine taster can pursue is tasting with a friend that has superior knowledge. Questions can be addressed, and you will quickly become comfortable with this unnecessarily intimidating subject.

Another important strategy for a beginning wine taster is to taste several wines side-by-side that share at least one common variable. This could be the varietal, style, AVA of origin, or any combination of the three.

Tasting blind will minimize any prior opinions or stereotypes. You may be surprised to discover that less-expensive wines are more pleasing to you.

The Essentials of Tasting Wine

It is imperative that you taste in spotlessly clean glasses. The most common contaminants in unclean glasses are invisible molecules left behind by cleaning products. Even high-end restaurants can be guilty of this faux pas. It is best to thoroughly hand wash glasses with unabrasive soaps and hot water.

It is beneficial, but not necessary to use varietal-specific glasses when tasting wine. Research has shown that the shape of glasses really does make a difference in the sensory experience.

Overview of the Tasting Process

Wine tasting employs much more than just the taste buds, although they are very important. Your palate is a term for how taste buds on your tongue translate particular flavors to your brain. The palate can perceive only four basic flavors: sweetness, sourness, saltiness, and bitterness. Most of the subtle flavor components of wine are actually picked up by one's sense of smell.

Although many of our daily perceptions are unconscious, making a concerted effort to pay attention to several things makes the tasting process more educational and rewarding. Despite the mystique that surrounds many wine "experts", tasting wine can be broken into simple steps. Wine knowledge usually stems from practice and confidence, not any inherent superiority.

Of course, some people have more developed senses than others. An extreme example is Robert Parker, widely regarded as the most influential wine critic in the world. Mr. Parker's tasting ability is derived from his natural ability to be keenly aware of his senses.

It is within the grasp of the vast majority of people to confidently differentiate varietals, styles, flavor profiles, and flaws when tasting wine. Tasting wine requires not only a grasp of your senses, but also the ability to articulate (with the proper vernacular) your thoughts about a particular wine.

Relevance of Sight in Tasting Wine

Your sense of sight will reveal a lot about a particular wine before smelling and tasting it. Immediately after pouring, check to see how clear the wine is. While haziness may simply indicate a full-bodied, unfiltered red wine, in any other style it is usually cause for concern. Wines will often taste the way that they look (an unrefined look may indicate a clumsy, unfocused wine).

Viewing the color of the edge of a wine in a glass will give you an indication of its maturity (or lack thereof). Mature, aged-worthy reds will have a deep crimson, or even brownish look. Too much brown usually means that the wine is past its prime. the rim of a white wine will generally be light yellow in youth, and and progress to an amber color with age.

After your initial visual impressions, swirl the wine in your glass. While this may be tricky at first, you will pick it up quickly. This reveals the "legs". The more wine sticks to the side of a glass, the higher the alcohol content.

The Role of the Sense of Smell During Wine Tasting

As mentioned earlier, many of the subtle "tastes" of wine are actually perceived by your sense of smell. While there are only four perceptible tastes, there are thousands of different scents. Revealingly, sinus congestion will stop even the most experienced and accomplished wine taster in his/her tracks. Smell is perceived through the upper nose as well as through the back of the throat. Molecules of different scents are registed by the olfactory bulb in the sinuses.

Before smelling a wine, swirl the glass again to reveal the aroma. When smelling a wine, attempt to put any familiar aromas into the context of previous tastings. This is the fundamental basis for increasing your knowledge of tasting wine.

After smelling the wine, the majority of registered perceptions occur very quickly. Sense of smell is very delicate and easily overwhelmed. Smelling the same thing repeatedly becomes less and less revelatory in rapid succession. If you do not immediately pick out the array of aromas in a wine, relax for a minute or two, then try again.

The Actual Tasting Begins

After experiencing the aroma of a wine, it is logically time to taste. Swirl the wine once more, and then swallow a small sip. After your initial impression, take a slightly larger sip and make an effort to coat your entire mouth. This is called, "chewing" the wine. Before swallowing, aerate the wine in your mouth. While this makes a slightly strange sound, the enhanced flavors and aromas that are released are more than worth it.

Another important component in the tasting process is touch, or how the wine feels in your mouth. Major variables to be aware of are the body of the wine, serving temperature, and astringency. The body of a wine includes the depth of flavor and alcohol content. If these components are underrepresented, a wine will taste dilluted.

Serving temperature is an important variable that mainly hinges on the varietal(s) that compose a particular wine. A crisp Sauvignon Blanc will taste flat at room temperature, and should be chilled. On the contrary, a well-aged Cabernet Sauvignon will not reveal its true complexity when served too cold. The incorrect serving temperature for a wine will adversely affect both the aroma and flavor.

Astringency is basically a synonym for bitterness, and is caused by excessive or unmellowed tannins. Great red wines often taste astringent in their youth, but develop into opulent masterpieces when mature.

I hope that you believe that proper wine tasting skills are within your reach; because they certainly are. Mankind's ancient enjoyment of wine is largely derived from the fact that our senses, feelings, and preferences are the basic components of what makes us human.

Benjamin Bicais lives in the Napa Valley and is the webmaster of http://www.california-wine-tours-and-accessories.com


MORE RESOURCES:
Shreveport-Bossier, LA (PRWEB) August 30, 2011 BREW, Shreveport-Bossiers premier beer tasting event, will take place in Festival Plaza on Saturday, October 15, 2011, from 3 until 7 pm. BREW, a collaboration between the Mudbug Madness Festival and the Red River …

Read more »


Question by : Why when I drink apple juice late at night I get “drunk”? It’s strange because I act “drunk” at like 12-2 when i drink apple juice why? It was apple juice i promise it was even a …

Read more »


Question by jamie68117: What is this song: “your love has got me dancin’, your love is better than wine”? OK so I work at Old Navy and they play this song all the time at work, but because we use …

Read more »


Question by TuX: What do I do if my girlfriend is trying to kill me? I woke up this morning and there was blood stains on her shirt and she said she was cutting meat but there was no meat …

Read more »


Question by Caia: Is there a way to figure out how much alcohol I’d have to drink…? before I’d become tipsy or drunk? I turned 21 today, and I’ve only done some mild wine drinking in the past (and it …

Read more »


Wake Forest, NC (PRWEB) January 19, 2012 The new electrical panel floor marking kit is made with pre cut strips of Superior Mark floor tape. Stop-painting.com manufactures Superior Mark, which is a unique floor marking tape that features beveled edges, …

Read more »


Question by Bretheren: What’s the name of the song and artist on the Arrested Development episode titled “Spring Break Out”? Buster is home alone and finds a “juice” box which is actually a wine box…He gets drunk and listens to …

Read more »


Question by MzAmerica: Men and Women, please answer! Is it “weird” for adult women to have a sleepover? A friend of mine invited me to a “sleepover” at her house. I’m 23, she’s 25 – all of the other girls …

Read more »


New York, New York (PRWEB) January 17, 2012 The direct marketing team at Opus One was no longer content to conquer the hearts and palates of Americans with their exquisite Bordeaux-blend wines; they decided it was high time to woo …

Read more »


(PRWEB) January 26, 2012 Research has proven that attacking alcohol use disorder and alcoholism at the source of the problem is more effective than conventional forms of treatment. The Last Call Program is scientifically proven to restore the chemical imbalance …

Read more »


Wine Spirit | Wine Spirit Site Map | Infrared Saunas
© 2010