 |
|
|
|
|
|
| Sitemap |
 |
| Click Here For More Info!
|
| |
How To Choose An Italian Wine
Wine connoisseurs regularly boast about their fine Italian wine collections and rightly so. Even if you’re not a connoisseur, by the end of this...
The Ideal Temperature To Store Your Wine
The ideal temperature to store wines is between 55ºF and 58ºF (13ºC–15ºC). However, any temperature between 40º–65ºF (5º–18ºC) will suffice as long...
The Rise of Rioja Wines
For many people Spanish wine either means cava - their excellent local sparkling wine made by the same traditional method as the finest champagnes –...
Beer, Wine and Your Bones
If you like the taste of a good brew, then here is some good news! In a recent research study of over 2,900 women and men, researchers found that...
|
| |
|
|
|
Understanding the Basics of Wine Tasting |
|
|
The wine taster's ritual of peering into a glass, swirling it around and sniffing suspiciously at it, before taking a mouthful only to spit it out again looks highly mysterious and technical. However, as you try more and more wines, your awareness of flavors and your personal preferences will develop. It is however a sequence of events that can enhance the enjoyment of good wine. Once learned, they become almost second nature to even the novice taster.
Wines Appearance Pour your wine into a wine glass so that it is about 40% full, you will need room for swirling. Have a good look at the wine. Is it clear, opaque, or cloudy? Does it contain sediments or other solid matter? Tilt the glass away from you at a 45-degree angle against a white background so you can enjoy the range of colors in the wine from the center to the rim. Wine changes color with age. Whites are at its palest state during their youth, gradually adding stronger color. Red wine, on the other hand, has more vivid color in its youth, slowly fading to brick red.
Smell the Wine Give your glass a vigorous swirl to help release the aromas. Swirling takes a bit of practice. This technique can be learned by leaving the wine glass on the table, holding it by the stem, and rotating it in small |
 |
If you want to build your own wine cellar ... If you're passionate about collecting wine ... If you want to discover more about wine ... Then This Is For You!
Click here for more info!
|
|
|
|
circles. The object is to get the wine to move up to around 70% of sides of the glass.
Stick your nose right into the glass and inhale steadily and gently, as if you were smelling a flower. These vital seconds of inhalation will reveal all kinds of familiar and unfamiliar smells. Try to detect the smell of fruity or floral notes. Decide what they remind you of if possible. Note the presence of spices, such as pepper, cinnamon, vanilla, tea or possibly nuts. Finally, note the presence of other aromas, such as cedar, oak, moist earth, herbs, chocolate, tobacco, toast, or smoke. Always interpret them in terms that mean something to you.
Remember, it's your nose that counts here. It does not matter if someone else interprets the smell differently, that is part of the pleasure of wine.
Taste At last, it is time to drink the wine. The following components that make up the flavor of the wine can be detected by rolling wine around in your mouth and concentrating on what comes to mind as you taste.
Sweetness This the fruit flavor tasted at the front of the tongue. This comes from the wine's fruit flavors as well as any fermented grape sugars left in the wine. If there is no perceived sweetness, a wine is dry.
Acidity This gives wine
|
|
|
|
TODAY'S NEWS:
A wine distributor sharing an industrial park may seem incongruous. But not to Kyle and Brad Harsha,
PHOENIXVILLE Tickets are still available for Wine Tasting With Hudson Austin, to be held at the home of Lyndi and Joe Puleo, 202 Washington Avenue, Saturday at 7 p.m.
For an evening of Italian food and fine wine that helps support a good cause, join members of the Victoria Adult Literacy Council from 6 to 8:30 p.m. Tuesday at Carino's Italian.
|
|
|
freshness and zest. When balanced, it makes for a fresh, crisp, enjoyable wine. On the other end of the spectrum, acidity can lend a negative, vinegary taste to the wine.
Tannin Comes from the stems and skins of the grape. It has a woody taste, similar to flavor released when biting a grape seed. Tannin can be mouth puckering, but it normally mellows with age.
Alcohol In low concentrations, alcohol portrays itself as somewhat sweet, and in high concentrations, it shows as a warm, pervasive sensation at the back of the mouth.
Fruitiness The intensity and flavor depends on the grape variety, growing conditions, and wine making techniques.
Balance For a good wine, there should be a balance of the above flavor components. If any one of the components is overpowering, the experience of drinking the wine can be tainted. This can sometimes mean that the wine is young and will become more balanced with age.
About the Author
Nerello Glasure [Fashion Artist of Zany Wearables: http://www.zanygiftware.com and a Publishing Member of the Wine Resource: http://www.winedefinitions.com.]
|
|
Virginia Wine Tasting
Living the Good Life
By Jim Bogaty- Owner Veramar Vineyard
In Virginia winery tasting rooms, learn “how to taste wine”
A wine tasting...
Wine: A Worthy Teammate for Football
(ARA) - Football and beer go together like baseball and hotdogs, but what about football and wine? Traditionally, wine has been benched on Sundays....
Many Online Casinos deceive you. Don't Trust them. Helpful Advices to track them
You can win in online casinos and make money Just don't wait to
earn million of dollars Play with your head and not with your
mouse (don't...
Plans Aren't Wine, And They Don't Always Age Well
The following crossed my desk recently. The author gave me permission to share her story:
"Please alert people to something we're experiencing...
|
|
|