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Wine Facts -
How to Taste
Wine
Are you ready to
perfect the right way to taste wine to enhance those
special moments in your life?
Learning how to taste test wine is
as simple as 1 - 2 - 3. The main skill in
tasting wine is easy to learn, and
anybody can become a good wine taster
if they want. Truly "tasting" wine means taking care to
study the qualities wine has to offer, which leads to a
better appreciation and enjoyment of the wine, and the
food you have paired with it.
Three senses unite
to make wine tasting a delightful
experience: sight, smell and taste. Watch an experienced
wine-taster at work and you'll see a
relatively casual 3-step process: a glance, a sniff and
a sip (#4 could be the Ahhhh! after the sip ritual is
completed). This expertise can be easily acquired with a
minimum of practice.
Sight or
Appearance - Looking can tell you quite a lot
about the wine. Lift your glass up against a white or
neutral background in a well lit room to get a general
impression of the color. Tilt it away from you until it
is almost horizontal to reveal the width and hue
of the wine's "rim". Then, with the glass
standing on a table, examine the wine from above to see
its true clarity, brightness and depth of
color.
What you See: The
wine should be clear and bright, not hazy. The
color should be rich and full. When checking
the appearance for degree of color, notice if it is:
bright purple (typical of young red wines), ruby and
browny-red (typical of aging red wines), or brown and
dull (an indication of a wine that is oxidized).
Smell or Nose - The
smell of a wine is described in a
general sense as its "nose". Smell stimulates
the palate as do tastes, and is the most
important of our senses for appreciating and enjoying
wine. Most of what we "taste" is in fact what we
"smell". Just recall how little you were able
to taste food or drink when you had a cold or a stuffy
nose.
To begin, swirl the glass around gently, holding it
by the stem or foot in order to release the
"aroma" (forward smells that come from
the grape) and "bouquet" (subtle scents
that develop as a result of maturing and oak aging).
Then sniff the wine, concentrating on the smell, and of
what it reminds you.
What you
Smell: The nose of a wine will vary in
intensity and distinction according to its
age, grape variety, origin and quality, but
it should always be clean i.e. free of unpleasant
odors. There are many words to describe what we smell,
however the easiest is to correlate what we smell to
that with which we are familiar. For example, you may
hear wines described as floral (rose,
jasmine, violet), spicy (pepper,
licorice), fruity (lemon, cherry,
melon) and woody (oak, cedar,
vanilla). These correlations will help you express the
sensations your nose experiences.
Taste -
Tasting is the only way to build real knowledge
of wine. Experiencing the taste of bitter,
sweet or salt is relative to which part of the tongue is
exposed to food or drink. Therefore, take a sip
of the wine and instead of swallowing it
straight down, work it around your
mouth for several seconds (this is called
"chewing"). Notice how much more of its flavor you can
taste. With the next sip, in addition to chewing it,
purse your lips and suck a
little air through the wine a few times before
swallowing. Notice how you can taste/smell even
more of the wine this way because you have
deliberately released its aroma and
bouquet. "Chewing" and "aerating" for several
seconds help to get the most out of any wine you taste.
And then there's the "Finish" - the taste that's left in
your mouth after the swallowing - the longer the
finish, the better the
wine.
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