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Wine Tasting Steps

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In this fast-paced world where we are often eating and drinking on the run, slowing down to savor a delicious glass of wine is truly a gift. To get the most out of the wine-tasting experience, take your time, involve all your senses, and follow these wine tasting steps.

Four Wine Tasting Steps

Most people talk about these four wine tasting steps:

  • See.

Hold your glass to the light or against a white tablecloth, and observe the color and the clarity.  Let the wine tell its story. For example, a white wine with a yellow hue was probably aged in oak barrels, as oak adds a yellow tint to the wine.

  • Swirl.

This aerates the wine and brings the aromas to the surface of the glass. If you’re new to swirling, place your glass on a flat surface, hold the glass stem, and use the stem to draw circles with your glass on the flat surface.

  • Smell.

Think of yourself as a hound dog. You’ll want to take many sniffs. You’ll probably also want to have anaroma wheel on hand to help you figure out what you’re smelling.

  • Sip.

Put a fairly large amount of wine in your mouth.

Eight Wine Tasting Steps

If you really get into it, you’ll want to take these eight steps:

  • See.

Read above.

  • Smell.

This is your first smell, when the wine is a little bit up tight becaus it hasn’t yet been aerated. You haven’t invited it to come out and play.

  • Swirl.

This is where you’re encouraging the wine to come out and play

  • Smell.

It’s incredibly fun to see how different the wine smells before and after aerating.

  • Sip.

Put a fairly large amount of wine in your mouth.

  • Savor.

Move the wine around your mouth for three or four seconds, so that your entire mouth is coated. The notion here is that you have different taste receptors in different parts of your mouth. So you want to make sure to activate all of those taste receptors.

  • Slurp.

With the wine in your mouth, open your lips slightly and very gently bring in extra air. Slurping the wine accentuates the olfactory experience. You get a lot more sensation on the back upper roof of your mouth.

  • Swallow.

As the wine goes down your throat, notice whether the experience changes at all from when the wine was in your mouth. Also, once the wine has been swallowed, see if you experience additional sensations in your mouth, which are known as the wine’s finish.

Throughout the tasting experience, you also want to invoke the sense of listening. Listen to the sound of the cork popping out of the bottle, the liquid as you pour it into your glass, and the ringing of your glasses  as you and your guests make a toast. Cheers!

 

By: Betty Kaufman

***Grabbed from: http://www.bettyswinemusings.com/wine-tasting-steps