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How to Taste Wine

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How to Taste Wine

Edited byKathy Howe and 37 others

Whenever you come across fertile wine country, wine tasting is often one of the most rewarding excursions available. If you long to walk through the vineyards and admire the grapevines and picturesque backdrop, wine glass in hand, you must first learn to appreciate the subtle beauty of wine.

Steps 

1 

Look at the wine, especially around the edges. Tilting the glass a bit can make it easier to see the way the color changes from the center to the edges. Holding the glass in front of a white background, such as a napkintablecloth, or sheet of paper, is another good way to make out the wine's true color. Look for the color of the wine and the clarity. Intensity, depth or saturation of color are not necessarily linear with quality. White wines become darker as they age while time causes red wines to lose their color turning more brownish, often with a small amount of harmless, dark red sediment in the bottom of the bottle or glass. This is also a good time to catch a preliminary sniff of the wine so you can compare its fragrance after swirling.  

This will also allow you to check for any off odors that might indicate spoiled (corked) wine.

2

Swirl the wine in your glass. This is to increase the surface area of the wine by spreading it over the inside of the glass allowing them to escape from solution and reach your nose. It also allows some oxygen into the wine, which will help its aromas open up.

3

Note the wine's viscosity - how slowly it runs back down the side of the glass - while you're swirling. More viscous wines are said to have "legs," and are likely to be more alcoholic. Outside of looking pretty, this has no relation to a wine's quality but may indicate a more full bodied wine.

4

Sniff the wine. Initially you should hold the glass a few inches from your nose. Then let your nose go into the glass. What do you smell?

5

Take a sip of wine, but do not swallow yet. Roll the wine around in your mouth exposing it to all of your taste buds. You will only be able to detect sweet, sour, salty, bitter and umami (think: meaty or savory). Pay attention to the texture and other tactile sensations such as an apparent sense of weight or body.

6

Aspirate through the wine: With your lips pursed as if you were to whistle, draw some air into your mouth and exhale through your nose. This liberates the aromas for the wine and allows them to reach your nose where they can be detected. The nose is the only place where you can detect a wine's aromas. However, the enzymes and other compounds in your mouth and saliva alter some of a wine's aromatic compounds. By aspirating through the wine, you are looking for any new aromas liberated by the wine's interaction with the environment of your mouth.

7

Take another sip of the wine, but this time (especially if you are drinking a red wine) introduce air with it. In other words, slurp the wine (without making a loud slurping noise, of course). Note the subtle differences in flavor and texture.

8

Note the aftertaste when you swallow. How long does the finish last? Do you like the taste?

9

Write down what you experienced. You can use whatever terminology you feel comfortable with. The most important thing to write down is your impression of the wine and how much you liked it. Many wineries provide booklets and pens so that you can take your own tasting notes. This will force you to pay attention to the subtleties of the wine. Also, you will have a record of what the wine tastes like so that you can pair it with meals or with yourmood.

Wines have four basic components: taste, tannins, alcohol and acidity. Some wines also have sweetness - but the latter is only appropriate in dessert wines. A good wine will have a good balance of all four characteristics. Aging will soften tannins (see Tips for a more detailed description). Acidity will soften throughout the life of a wine as it undergoes chemical changes which include the break down of acids. Fruit will rise and then fall throughout the life of a wine. Alcohol will stay the same. All of these factors contribute to knowing when to drink/decant a wine.

Here are some commonly found tastes for each of the most common varieties (bear in mind that growing region, harvesting decisions and other production decisions have a great impact on a wine's flavor character):

Cabernet - black currant, cherry other, black fruits, green spices

Merlot - plum, red and black fruits, green spices, floral

Zinfandel - black fruits (often jammy), black spices - often called "briary"

Syrah (aka Shiraz, depending on vineyard location) - black fruits, black spices - especially white and black pepper

Pinot Noir - red fruits, floral, herbs

Chardonnay - cool climate: tropical fruit, citrus fruit in slightly warmer climes and melon in warm regions. With increasing proportion of malolactic fermentation, Chardonnay loses green apple and takes on creamy notes, Applepearpeach,apricot

Sauvignon Blanc - Grapefruit, white gooseberry, limemelon

Malolactic fermentation (the natural or artificial introduction of a specific bacteria) will cause white wines to taste creamy or buttery

Aging in oak will cause wines to take on a vanilla or nutty flavor.

Other common taste descriptors are minerality, earthiness and asparagus.

10

Match the glassware to the wine. Stemware/drinkware comes in a variety of shapes and sizes. The more experienced wine drinkers and connoisseurs often enjoy wines out of stemware or bulbs that are tailor-made for a specific varietal. When starting out, there is a basic rule of thumb; larger glasses for reds, and smaller glasses for whites. Austrian glassware company Riedel is the gold standard of drinkware when it comes to wine, but for the beginner, less expensive stemware will do.

11

Try pairing wines with unusual ingredients and note the how it enhances or diminishes the flavors of the wine. With red wines try different cheeses, good quality chocolate and berries. With white wines you can try apples, pears and citrus fruits. Pairing wine with food is more complicated than "red with beef and white with fish." Feel free to drink whichever wine you want with whatever food you want, but remember a perfect pairing is a highly enjoyable experience.

12

Ultimately, a wine should complement the food and cleanse the palate. So big, jammy, sweet wines will not do as well as ones with a more composed bouquet or aromas and high acidity.

 

 

 

Inexpensive wine 'good as pricier bottles' - blind taste test

I enjoy red wine.  I also enjoy saving money and have good news for you... these two things are not mutually exclusive!  For most of us, reasonably good wine tastes... well, reasonably good.  There is no doubt that I could generally tell the difference among wines I am familiar with.  However, this BBC News study below indicates that most people (even a few experts) couldn't tell the difference as often as you might think between expensive and inexpensive wine.  Take a look (I converted the £'s to $'s for you!)

Wine costing less than $8 a bottle can have the same effect on the palate as those priced up to six times as much, a psychological taste challenge suggests.

The blind test at the Edinburgh Science Festival saw 578 members of the public correctly identify the "cheap" or "expensive" wines only 50% of the time.  They tasted a range of red and white wines including merlot and chardonnay.  University of Hertfordshire researchers say their findings indicate many people may just be paying for a label.

Two champagnes costing $29 and $49 were compared, alongside the bottles costing less than $8 and vintages priced between $16 and $49.  The other varieties tasted were shiraz, rioja, claret, pinot grigio and sauvignon blanc.  The participants were asked to say which they thought were cheap and which were expensive.  By the laws of chance, they should have been able to make a correct guess 50% of the time - and that was the exact level of accuracy seen.

The findings demonstrate the volunteers cannot distinguish between wines by taste alone, the organisers of the test say  Lead researcher psychologist Professor Richard Wiseman said: "These are remarkable results. People were unable to tell expensive from inexpensive wines, and so in these times of financial hardship the message is clear - the inexpensive wines we tested tasted the same as their expensive counterparts."

Now note that they did not taste my personal favorites; cabernet, malbec or pinot noir.  
So as a public service, here is the list of my top five favorite reds under $12 that I have tried recently:

5) BR Cohn North Coast - Silver Label (2007) $12

4) Diseno (Mendoza, Argentina) Malbec (2009) $9

3) Blackstone Reserve Cabernet (Sonoma, 2008) $12

2) Liberty School Cabernet (Paso Robles, 2007) $12

1) 14 Hands (Washington, 2009) "Hot to Trot" Red Blend $10

Enjoy!

 

Paso Robles Wine Country

Paso Robles (just north of San Luis Obispo) has become one of my favorite regions for California wine.  One of my favorite value wines is Liberty School Cabernet.  I have found several wines that have come from Paso Robles that have been teriffic!  This article highlights a few others...

Konchi

By Stacy Slinkard, About.com Guide

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Paso Robles is the new hotspot for oenophiles looking for the latest in wine country travel.  As California's fastest growing wine region and the state's largest AVA in terms of acreage under vine, Paso Robles' modest role of "hidden wine country gem" looks to be over, as the buried treasure of California's Central Coast has been roused and thrust full force into the bright lights of today's international wine stage. Snagging Wine Spectator's4 "Wine of the Year" for 2010 with Saxum's 2007 James Berry Vineyard Proprietory Red, certainly hasn't hurt Paso Robles' growing reputation for stellar Rhone Valley blends5. However, Spectator's top spot is merely a prestigious, high-profile indicator light of the quality and class of wine that Paso Robles is turning out.

There is certainly something to savor in the simplicity of a wine region that prides itself on its roots and doesn't shy away from its growth. Beckoning wine lovers to experience the thrill of the grape in Paso's coveted Rhone blends and beyond, over a million vineyard visitors dig their toes into the dirt of this authentic, accessible and well-rounded wine growing region annually.

Winsome wineries6 welcome guests to the tasting table and often out to the vineyards as well. With many wineries still offering free or nominal tasting fees, visitors to the region7 come face to face with the families that grow the grapes, make the wines and are thrilled to share their labors of love with guests the world over.  Merging its red-hot foodie culture8 with the well-worn roots of ranch life, Paso Robles wears its laid-back luxury really well. 

Check out the Paso Robles Wine Country Guide here