Learning How to Taste Wine is really pretty easy. It’s really all about the S’s!
Let’s get started by filling your favorite wine glass about 1/3 full with any wine on hand.
S1. Swirl
Leave the glass setting on the table and hold by the stem. Gently swirl the glass until the wine begins to go around the glass. Five or Six times around are fine. This is done because wine tastes better when a little air is mixed in with it. It actually intensifies the flavors. Secondly, it creates a little friction, then a little heat, and then finally a little evaporation. The scent of the wine flows through the nasal passages and you get the best of both worlds, flavor and aroma.
S2. Sniff
If you had the good fortune to be born with a giant honker or a monstrous schnoz, you were born to be a wine taster! 90% of the taste of wine is determined through your nose.
For most people this is the area that creates the most confusion. When you are starting out and trying to smell the aroma of wine and hear another taster say: I get hints of yadda, yadda, yadda, you think to yourself, it smells like red to me. Right? That’s OK. Recognizing the aromas is really something that takes a little while to get. We’ll touch on this more in future episodes. But for now, I just want you to know the process.
S3. Sip
If we have to talk a lot about this one. We’re in trouble. Take enough to coat your mouth
S4. Swish
Gently move the wine around you mouth. Taste buds are different in different areas of your tongue. For instance, sweets are at the tip. Sour is on the top and salty is on the sides. Moving the wine around allows you to get the full range of flavor from your wine.
S5. Swallow
Known as the big finish! It’s literally the taste that wines gives you as it rolls down the back of your throat as you swallow. You get a “Turbo Boost” of flavor as the acidity of the wine, touches the nerve endings in your throat, giving you a tingling sensation.
The question of the week asks what is the right temperature for wine?
The idea temperature is to serve whites about 55 degrees. Most people drink their wine way too cold. Your refrigerator is about 40 degrees, perfect for soft drinks and beer, but way too cold for wine. The cold will literally slow down the flavor molecules and cause the wine to lose most of its taste
Red wines are actually better is served slightly chilled. Say about 64-65 degrees. The old saying about room temperature comes from a few hundred years ago when the French chateaus walls were a couple of feet thick. Room temperature back then was mid sixties. Today, most people think room temperature is about 72 degrees. If you like it at 72 then by all means drink it at 72. But just for kicks and giggles try it slightly chilled and see what you think.
Wine of the Week – Riesling
*Great first white wine to try. This is the only white that many people like.
*Typical flavors of green apple and citrus
*Usually comes in a blue bottle
*Originally from Germany, popular production areas include Oregon and Washington
*Two distinct versions, one is pretty sweet and easy to drink, the other is much drier, more acidic and great as a food wine
So thanks for watching, let me know your thoughts on the show and remember to sign up for show updates.
Cheers!
Mark Adams