Wine Tasting

To expand your knowledge on appreciating both wines and wine producers  producers,  learning to taste wine is a fairly straightforward process.  Using your natural senses of sight, smell, and taste you will be able to sample wine as a professional hardly any time at all!  Understanding that the sense of smell is capable of distinguishing thousands of scents in comparison to the sense of taste, which is limited determining sweet, sour, salty, and bitter.  Combining the two senses will enable you to distinguish the discerning flavour of each wine.

 With a fine glass of wine in hand, view the fluidity of the wine.  When you tilt the glass away from you,  notice the colour of the liquid from the edge of the rim to the  middle of the glass.  It is advisable to have a white, clear background,  for example,  a napkin or white tablecloth is ideal.

 Looking beyond the obvious colour groups of white, red, or blush,  determine whether the colour is actually maroon, burgundy, garnet, brick, red, or purple.  If you are reviewing a white wine, establish whether the colour is in fact a pale yellow,  straw-like, golden,  light-green, brown, or amber in appearance.

 The next step is to establish the opacity of the wine, eg.  Is it watery, translucent, opaque, or dark?  Is there still sediment present?  Tilting and swirling the glass will enable any sediment or cork to float to the top.  The older the red wine, the more orange tinges there will be on the edges of the glass than a younger red wine.  Older whites tend to be darker than white wines.

 Paramount in sampling wine is our sense of smell.  Swirling the glass for a good 10-15 seconds will enable you to gain a good impression of the aroma as this releases some of it’s more natural aromas by vaporizing some of the alcohol.  Once swirled,  inhale deeply to gain your first impression.

 Placing your nose further into the glass,  inhale deeply.  Concentrate and assertain whether you can smell oak, flowers, vanilla, berry, or citrus.  The aroma of the wine can determine the not only the quality of the wine, but also the unique characteristics.   Swirling the glass once more allowing the aromas to blend,  inhale through the nose again.

 Now, you can finally taste the wine.  A small sip is required and let it slowly roll around the mouth.  With three stages of taste,  Attack, Evolution, and the Finish:

 Attack Phase:

 The initial impression of the wine on your palete is called the Attack Phase.  Comprising of four elements,  tannin, alcohol, acidity, and residual sugar.    Ideally,  all four components should be well-balanced and one will not be more predominant than the other,  displaying a blend of flavours rather than one specific flavour.

 Evolution Phase:

 Occasionally referred to as the mid-palate or middle range phase, the evolution phase analyzes the actual taste on the palate.  You are looking to determine the flavour profile of the wine for example,  if you are sampling a red wine, you may note fruit,  plum, prune, fig, or berry, or even some spice,  pepper, cinnamon, clove, or a more woody flavour such as cedar, oak, or detect a hint of smokiness.   White wine may offer the taste of fruit, such as pear, tropical, citrus, or apple,  or possibly a more floral or natural taste such as honey, herbs, earthiness, or butter.

 The Finnish:

 The final phase is the wine’s finish.  How long does the flavour impression remain after swallowing?  Aftertaste is important,  how long did it last, several seconds?  Was it full-bodied similar in texture to cream?  Medium-bodied, similar to milk?  Light-bodied, similar to water?  Does the taste remain at the back of your throat and mouth?   The final flavour impression, was it fruity,  butter, or oak?   Was the taste bitter?  Any, the ultimate question,  do you want to take another sip?

Steps for Wine-Making

You will be surprised at the quality of the wine that you can produce yourself by ensuring the following steps are adhered to:

Ensure that all equipment is thoroughly sterilized before starting inclusive of your 4.5 litre, or 1 gallon jar.
Add the grape juice concentrate
Add approximately 3 litres of cold water to the jar.  Tap water is adequate.
If not included in your home-making kit,  dissolve the sugar in warm water
If not included in the home-making kit, add the sugar solution to the concentrate
Top-up the jar with water to 1 gallon,  4.5 litres
Add the yeast contained in the packet
The airlock needs to be half-filled with water before inserting into the bung to seal the jar
Store in a warm place, approximately between 21-24 C,  70-75 F.  Heating pads or belts can be purchased.
Hydrometer readings at various stages will enable to check on the sugar level; For dry wine:  0.99 – 0.996.  Medium:  0.996 – 1.009.  Sweet:  1.009 – 1.018.
Add two crushed Campden tablets with potassium sorbate at the end of fermentation then refit the bung and airlock.
Leave the wine in a cool place,  15 C, 60 F,  to clear.  In a few days, transfer the wine from the sediment.
Occasionally the wine will not clear independently and you may need to purchase “finings”.  All instructions will be included with your purchase.
Once clear, pass the wine through a filter to achieve brilliance.  Once professional brilliance is achieved, transfer the wine into sterilized wine bottles.
Using a corking tool, fit the corks, attach labels, and finally shrink caps.

Wine Making

Wine-making is a surprisingly simple yet highly enjoyable past-time, though it may be worth noting that legally within the UK,  you can produce as much wine as you wish, however,  you must not attempt to sell your produce to anyone.

 With a total production cost of approximately 50p per bottle,  you can produce various types of wine with an alcohol content within the range of 7-18%.

 An initial financial outlay is required for equipment, but once invested, you can constantly make wine for a fraction of the retail prices available within the supermarket or the continent.

 Wine-Making Process:

 Home wine-making kits are widely available but for a quick checklist, please ensure that you have the following equipment included:

 Primary Fermenter

 Primary fermentation requires a container that has a volume of at least 20 – 30% than the must to ensure that during fermentation the container allows for the foaming.  A large plastic bucket can be used as long it has a lid.   During fermentation, the carbon dioxide must have an air-hole to escape through.   Once the air-hole has been made it is recommended that you insert an air-lock to keep vinegar flies out of the must.

 Carboy

 A glass container that come in sizes of 2, 3, 5, 6, 7 and half gallons inbetween such as 6.5.  5 gallons is the standard size.  The large containers of 7 and 7.5 can become extremely heavy when full and can become excessively heavy to lift or maintain.  With a narrow neck and opening, the Carboy or Carbouy allows for the use of the air lock and stop.

 Plastic Buckets

 You can never have too many pails or buckets for wine-making!

 Buckets can be utilised for carrying must,  mixing ingredients,  racking etc.  Again, with a range of sizes buckets are extremely useful.

 AirLocks

 U-shaped devices that are simply valves that allow the carbon dioxide to escape from the wine as it ferments while stopping oxygen and bacteria from reaching the liquid.  A sodium metabisulfite solution is placed in the U of the airlock to enable the escape of gas and killing any harmful bacteria that could contaminate the wine, and eliminating any fruit flies.

 Cork

 With a choice of different corks available,  the cork keeps the wine and seals the bottle with natural expansion.  A quick guide is use natural cork for bottles that you wish to keep for more than one year,  agglomerated cork (or processed corks) should only be used for quicker consumption.

 Corker

 Used to insert the cork into the bottle

 Carboy and Bottle Brushes

 Carbouy brushes are L-shaped to enable the glass to be cleaned along the U-bend, very similar in appearance to a bottle brush.  It is recommended that all brushes are rinsed in an sodium metabisulfate solution before and after use.

 Hydrometer

 A cylindrical glass rod,  the hydrometer is used to measure the sugar content of the must or wine.  Floated within a test-tube filled with the must,  the buoyancy of the hydrometer will indicate how much sugar is present.  The higher the hydrometer the higher content of sugar is present.  The hydrometer has  measurements along the side to enable ease of use.

 Siphoning Tubes

 Used to transfer the must from container to another during the bottling and racking process.  Ensure that the tubes are long enough to reach the bottom of the container that is due to be siphoned and the bottom of the container that the fluid is being siphoned into.  When racking, ensure that the juice does not splash into the new container as could cause too much oxygen to be present in the wine.

Rose Wine

Rose has many different pronunciations,  Rosado in Spanish,  Rosato in Italian,  or blush,  though all refer to pink coloured wine.  Again,  the shades vary from subtle hues of pink through to stronger hot pink varieties dependent on which grape is used and for the length of time that the skins remained in contact with the juice.  European roses tend to be dry, though dependent on regions,  rose can range from sweet to bone-dry.

 Grape varietals include Pinot Noir, Grenach, Malbec, Merlot,  Cabernet Sauvignon, Shiraz, Zinfandel, Tempranillo, and Sangiovese, and a can be used either solitary or blended.

 Tempranillo, Sangiovese and Zinfandel. These varietals may be either used solo or in a blend.

 A sparkling rose is traditionally produced from a blend of white and red grapes and this process has recently been introduced to still rose wine making.

 Flavor Profile:

 Usually a more subtle version of a red wine varietal would produce,  you can experience flavours of cherry, watermelon,  raspberry, strawberry, and citrus fruit.