WolverineWine Club Guide to Wine Tasting
1- Appearance
Thetaster wants to look at the color, the depth and the clarity or hue.
Forthe red wines the color can range from red purple, ruby, red, red-brown, …amber-brown.
Forthe white wines the spectrum ranges from pale yellow green, straw yellow, yellowgold, to brown.
Inaddition to color, you may notice other visual clues about the wine. Forinstance, "legs" or "tears" run down the inside of the glassafter a swirl. The viscosity of these droplets gives an indication of a winesalcohol content.
2 -The "Nose" or "Bouquet"
“First Nose”
After pouring the wine into your glass, bring it to your nose for your first smell. When you expose wine to air, some of the alcohol compounds, esters, begin to vaporize.
The first nose allows you exposure to the more delicate esters and gives you a very important first impression of the wine.
See AlsoWine Jobs: An Overview of Careers in Wine | Wine FollyFundraising Wine Wall: What It Is & Why It WorksWine Pricing: Strategy, Profitability and AdjustmentsSorry - but you've been drinking wine wrong your entire life.“Second Nose”
After the first impression, swirl the wine around in your glass. This increases the exposure of the wine to oxygen and serves to disperse the more delicate esters in favor of the heavier, more complex aspects of the wine (esters are some of the components that make up a wine's aromas). When these components combine with oxygen they yield the bouquet of the wine.. You will immediately notice a much different, more full smell. It is interesting to consider the differences between the first nose and the second.
3 - TheMouth
Thetaster judges wine in 3 or 4 characteristics depending on the color of the wine.
Forthe white wines, there are three dimensions:
Acidity, alcohol, softness.
Sweetness
Acidity Softness
Think of these as forming a triangle with each attribute at a point. Each wine tasted forms its own triangle within the main framework depending on the differing proportions.
Forred wines, a fourth dimension is added:
Acidity, alcohol, softness, astringency (this comes from the skins of the wine)
Sweetness
Acidity
Softness
Astringency
Think of these attributes as forming a square with each attribute at one of the points. Again, each wine can be pictorially reflected as occupying a different combination of points within the framework.
Abalanced wine is one that has equal levels of the 3 or 4 dimensions. If each ofthe attributes were plotting in the framework, the larger the square or trianglethe “bigger” the wine. The larger the impact of the wine when first tasted,the longer the taste of the wine will stay in your mouth after you haveswallowed it.
Themouth is also broken into 4 main areas that deals with the tongue:
-Sugar at the tip on the tongue,
-Sour or Tannin at the back of the tongue (tannin frequently is much moreprominent in red wines or wood-aged white wines).
-Acid at the sides of the tongue and on the insides of the cheeks -acidity is more apparent in white wines than red wines - and
-Salt at the extreme sides.
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4 -The Aftertaste
Thefinish, or aftertaste, is the overall taste that lingers after you haveswallowed or spit the wine. How long does the taste linger? Usually a sign of a highquality wine is a long, pleasing aftertaste lasting from 15 to 20 secondsafter you've swallowed the wine.