The criteria of the Deductive Tasting Method (4)
1-Sight
2-Nose
3-Palate
4-Conclusion: initial and final (theoretical deduction)
What does SIGHT allow you to deduct?
How should you evaluate wine, sight wise?
Filtered vs. Unfiltered wine
Filtered: typically from New World, go through sterile filtration and bottling to remove bacteria and proteins that can cloud wine.
Unfiltered: some producers of high quality wine believe that only natural fining and filtration should be used, anything more strips wine of its flavors.
Define: Brightness
the capacity of a wine to reflect light - a function of clarity.
The brightness scale (6 levels)
Dull - Hazy - Bright - Day Bright - Star Bright - Brilliant
What does a wine’s color / hue all you to deduct?
-clues to a wine’s age, storage conditions or grape variety.
White and blush wines grow ______ with age. (generally speaking)
Darker
Red wines grow _____ with age (generally speaking)
Lighter
Pigments and tannin in red wines precipitate into _________ with age. (generally speaking)
Sediment.
What can secondary colors tell you about a wine?
-Age, climate or variety.
_________ in young or cool climate white wines (secondary colors)
Green
_______, _________, __________ in older red wines ( secondary colors)
White wines (5) (color scales)
Watery - Straw - Yellow - Gold - Brown
Pink wines (3) ( color scales)
Pink - Salmon - Brown
Red Wines (5) (color scales)
Purple - Ruby (Red) - Garnet (Reddish Brown) - Orange - Brown
Rim Variation (what and why)
What is sediment? (Sight)
Tartrates (Wine Diamonds)
-tiny, crystalline deposits that occur in
wines when potassium and tartaric acid, both naturally occurring products of grapes, bind together to form a crystal.
-Excess tartartic acid
-Present in all wines
-Often removed through filtration or cold stabilization.
(less common in red wines, as their level of
tartaric acid is lower, and crystals tend to fall out naturally during the longer barrel-aging process. )
Legs/Tears - Viscosity
What is the most importance aspect of the Deductive Tasting Method?
Nose, smell accounts for some 85% of taste
Why and how do we swirl a glass of wine?
Volatilizing (disperse in vapor) the esters - releasing the flavor elements attached to the alcohol molecules in the wine.
Wine Flaws (Nose)
TCA - Corkiness ( Wine Flaws)