Monday - Wine Manners
Alcohol Hierarchy: The Order of Wine
As you embark on a wine tasting, you may require a variety of things: bottles of wine, a cork screw, wine glasses, a wine tasting kit, perhaps even an English accent. While this stuff may be essential, unless you know the hierarchy of the wines, they become useless.
When it comes to order of wine, it?s easy to get ahead of yourself. As bottles line the shelves, the labels coiled around their bodies like curled fingers calling you over, it takes some self discipline to not dive in too quickly, no matter how much you are drooling. Patience, when it comes to tasting wine, is more than a virtue: it?s the law.
Proper wine tasting demands that wine be consumed in a specific order. Drinking incorrectly won?t only change the way wine tastes, but it will change your perception of it: if consumed in the wrong order, you may unfairly judge a wine, spitting out your drink and cursing the bottle because its taste is altered. When a wine is tasted in the wrong order, it doesn?t stand a chance; its taste and reputation become inferior: it practically becomes light beer.
Wines that are heavy and full bodied can overpower the lighter wines, leaving the lighter wines to taste differently than they really do. For this reason, lighter wines should be tasted first. However, this can be tricky when you don?t know what a wine tastes like. It?s hard to know which ones are light and which ones are heavy: a scale is of no help and if you simply ask the wines about their mass, they will probably just lie about their weight. This is when the other senses must step in.
Using the senses of sight, smell, and - if you?re lucky enough to have it - ESP, you can usually gauge whether a wine is light or heavy. Lighter wines are dense and tend to leave thick streaks inside the glass when swirled. Heavy wines are deeper in color and their odor is more intense.
After you have predicted whether a wine is light or heavy to the best of your ability, put the wines in an order where you will consume the lighter wines first and the heavier wines second. On occasion a defective wine may find its way into your tasting. These wines may smell of rotten egg or cork and should be tasted last, if at all.
Once the lighter wines are separated from the heavier wines, the order of the wine gets a little more complex. Sparkling wines, such as champagne, have the honor of being in the front: they are the wines that have called shotgun. Next, light whites wines, such as Albari?o, should be consumed. These are followed by heavier whites. A full bodied Chardonnay fits into this category.
After whites have all been tasted, it?s time to switch colors. The change is gradual at first as rose wine comes to the table. These wines are pink in color and may be known as ?blush,? ?Rosado?, or ?Rosata.? Light reds , such as a Bardolino, and heavy reds, such as a Cabernet Sauvignon, respectively follow.
Once you?ve got the order of your wines down, the rest of the wine tasting process is simple. You just need to get a few bottles of wine, a cork screw, wine glasses, and a wine tasting kit. Some wine tasting kits may even include all the aforementioned supplies. But, even for these kits, English accents are sold separately.
Jennifer Jordan is the senior editor at http://www.savoreachglass.com With a vast knowledge of wine etiquette, she writes articles on everything from how to hold a glass of wine to how to hold your hair back after too many glasses. Ultimately, she writes her articles with the intention that readers will remember wine is fun and each glass of anything fun should always be savored. |
Short Review on Wine Manners
Alcohol Hierarchy: The Order of Wine
As you embark on a wine tasting, you may require a variety of things: bottles of wine, a cork screw, wine glasses, a wine tasting kit, perhaps even an...
Click Here to Read More About Wine ...
Featured Wine Manners Items
Bollinger Spec Cuvee Brut

Price: 135.95 USD
News about Wine Manners
Mmm… Boozahol!
Mon, 08 Sep 2008 06:33:10 PDT
So, as I may have mentioned once or twice, I enjoy drinking wine although I lack a sophisticated palette to comment on things like bouquet and tannins. Most of the time, I can barely guess the fruits in it and have to read the label even though they’re incredibly misleading and apparently written by the same person who writes the blurbs on the back of romance novels. In fact, when it’s one of those drinkin’ type of weekends, you can find me down the wine aisle at our nearby grocery store or, e
Gambling on gourmet (The State)
Mon, 08 Sep 2008 05:50:47 PDT
It’s risky business, restaurants. Entertaining. Satisfying taste buds. Exceeding expectations. It’s even more risky opening a fine-dining restaurant with a chef versed in gastronomic experimentation and a wine list longer than a country mile. Situate it in the heart of wings and barbecue country, add an economic downturn to the mix, and the venture could be downright scary. Yet the folks ...
Placer County News Roundup - September 8, 2008
Mon, 08 Sep 2008 05:03:56 PDT
Council takes action on sewer rate, city budget - Colfax Record Faced with the cold hard reality of a sewer rate protest that backfired into potentially costing property owners and the city millions of dollars, both the council and the about two dozen citizens in attendance got down to the serious - and for once, cooperative - business of deciding what to do next. Dream project became star builder's nightmare - Sac Bee Stripped of his beloved Winchester Country Club housing development and faci
Monday Moronic Scam E-Mail
Mon, 08 Sep 2008 03:05:58 PDT
Good Day, Let me start by introducing myself. I am Mrs. Zhu Yuning, Am an accountant in the Fondazione Di Vittorio, established 1977 by the Multi-Million groups and now supported by United Nations Organization (UNO) and the European Union (EU), and conceived with the objective of human growth, educational, and community development thereby uplifting the standard of living of people. Below is the site. 1.http://www.fondazionedivittorio.it After further investigation, it was discovered th
Raise A Glass
Mon, 08 Sep 2008 01:22:00 PDT
In Saturday's WSJ, Eric Felten suggested a novel way to support Georgia (sub req): The brandies of the Caucasus region -- Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan -- are known for their distinctive fruitcake sweetness. When the whisky writer Michael Jackson wanted to describe a single-malt Scotch as tasting of dried fruits and raisins, he would say it was redolent of Georgian brandy. I happened to have a bottle of Azerbaijani brandy on my shelf (the gift of a friend who had traveled there -- I've n
ARC book sale set for this weekend (Pearland Journal)
Mon, 08 Sep 2008 00:55:12 PDT
Looking for some good books? A Wine & Cheese Preview Night at SpringHill Suites Hotel located at 1820 Country Place Parkway (C.R. 94), Pearland, from 5:00 to 8:30 pm on Friday, September 5th, offers book lovers a first look at over 25,000 books available for purchase at the 10th Annual Used Book Sale benefiting the Adult Reading Center. Tickets for this event are $10 and can be purchased at the ...
Wheeling your way through the winelands
Mon, 08 Sep 2008 00:11:17 PDT
Here’s a crafty way to get your non-wine loving friends (do people like this exist?) to tag along with you to a wine farm: get them to take part in the Nelson’s Creek mountain bike festival while you spend a leisurely day tasting wine. Alternatively – take part in the fun yourself and earn your post-biking food and wine. The inaugural Nelson’s Creek MTB Festival kicks off on Friday, 12 September 2008 and includes a range of events for all levels of fitness and competitiveness. And don’t forget
Wine Store
Wine Cassis
Homemade Wine
Labels: Wine Merchants | Wine Note
&type=page">




0 Comments:
<< Home