(no subject)
Jan. 27th, 2004 12:05 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I like drinking wine, but I'm certainly no expert. I don't, for example, know how to talk about wine using the kinds of terms you see in tasting notes (for example, "A medium ruby starting to show some brick at the edges. A clean but modest nose of dark stone fruits and violets. The tannins are smooth and melting away. Blackberries and plums; rose petals. Lovely but starting to fade." Huh?).
So I'm intrigued by these instructions for how to develop a sense of different aromas a wine can have. It explains how to make "standards" to illustrate specific scents - combining a neutral wine (like the kind that comes in a box) with bits of different flavorings. For example:
It seems like a lot of work to set up the standards, but I also think it could be fun. Might be a good idea for a party.
So I'm intrigued by these instructions for how to develop a sense of different aromas a wine can have. It explains how to make "standards" to illustrate specific scents - combining a neutral wine (like the kind that comes in a box) with bits of different flavorings. For example:
Asparagus (several drops of brine of canned asparagus)He recommends that you get some broadly different wines to taste, and then use the "standards" as a reference to try and identify the different aromas present in the wines.
Bell Pepper (tiny piece of bell pepper - don't leave in too long)
Vanilla (drop of vanilla extract)
Butter (drop of butter extract)
Clove (one clove, don't leave in too long)
It seems like a lot of work to set up the standards, but I also think it could be fun. Might be a good idea for a party.
no subject
Date: 2004-01-27 05:34 pm (UTC)Prizes (gift certificate to a wine merchant?) to those who correctly identify the most flavors, and perhaps to those who best use them to describe the wines being tasted.
Damn, I may have to steal this ...
no subject
Date: 2004-01-27 05:51 pm (UTC)