|
Advanced wine tasting
topics
By Lauriann Greene-Sollin,
Sommelier-Conseil and French Wine Expert, President of French Wine Explorers |
|
|
Winemega.com is extremely pleased to welcome Lauriann Greene-Sollin, a graduate of France's prestigious Université du Vin at Suze-la-Rousse where she has earned the French state-recognized diploma and title of
Sommelier-Conseil. Lauriann's extensive knowledge of French wine comes from over 10 years of study and tastings, and time spent working in wineries in the Southern Rhône Valley and Beaujolais. Her interest in wine has flowered into a passion and business activity she now shares with her husband and fellow
Sommelier-Conseil, Jean-Pierre Sollin. Lauriann regularly teaches
wine tasting classes and leads wine tastings in France and the United States for corporations and private groups. Her articles on wine have been published on the
"Bonjour
Paris" website, in International Homes magazine in the U.K., and in Cuisine Tours magazine in Chicago. As a wine educator, one of Lauriann's primary goals is to make French wine accessible and understandable for our guests.
Lauriann speaks fluent French, and enjoys translating making French wine understandable and accessible. Those who know Lauriann are familiar with her vivacious personality, broad smile, and keen intelligence. She loves to make our guests feel welcome, and introduce them to "La Joie de Vivre", the joyful French way of life she adores.
Welcome on Winemega, Lauriann!
|
|
|
|
|
|
The French have two words for "tasting": gouter, which means simply to
taste as in to sample, or deguster, which means to
taste with the goal of identifying the characteristics of a product to enable one to judge its quality. In the world of wine, we favor the term deguster. La degustation of wine is not the preoccupation of snobs, but of those who have an inquisitive spirit and questioning mind, and who wish to gain a more in-depth understanding of this extraordinary beverage that has been so lauded and coveted for so many centuries.
In this article, we'll go beyond the degustation basics to get a more complete understanding of the process of
wine tasting, develop a more extensive vocabulary for your tasting experiences, and define more exactly the different elements in wine that contribute to quality. I hope to be able to also give you a little view into the particular sensibility that the French bring to
wine tasting, to enable you to see how they feel and speak about the wines of their country.
|
|
|
|
I.
THE ROLE OF THE SENSES IN WINE TASTING |
|
|
|
a. Sight and Smell:
In our Introduction to
wine tasting, we presented three distinct
steps for tasting a wine: the look, the smell and the
taste. Each
step utilized one sense at a time (sight, smell and
taste
respectively). In reality, the senses do not work in nearly such a
distinct manner. For example, the look of the wine can greatly
influence your sense of smell, and thus your appreciation of the
aromas
of a wine. We associate certain
aromas with white wine, and
others with red wine. Studies have shown that subjects who tasted
wine in black glasses had difficulty discerning the
aromas of the
wine in question. In another study, subjects were served a white
wine and asked to describe its
aromas
. The responses were white
flowers, apple, pear, and peach. Then the exact same wine was
served, but with red food coloring added. The subjects, thinking
this was now a red wine, described the
aromas as strawberry,
raspberry and coffee. They also found the wine to be slightly
tannic!
|
|
|
|
b.Smell and Taste:
In
the mouth, these two senses are inextricably linked. The
combination of the tastes of the wine and the smells of the wine
is referred to as "flavor". In fact, flavor is mostly
determined by smell. For this reason, when your
nose is blocked,
the food you eat seems flavorless. You can see why we spend so
much time waxing poetic about the
aromas of a wine - without them,
the wine would have little flavor. The
aromas are so important
that we gauge the persistence of a wine by the time it takes for
the
aromas to dissipate after the wine is no longer in the mouth,
NOT the tastes. The importance of retro-olfaction once you have
the wine in your mouth should not be underestimated! Your
enjoyment of a wine is to a great extent determined by the
pleasantness, complexity and persistence of
aromas. The rest of
your enjoyment comes from the
balance of the wine, the
body of the
wine, and the density or concentration of the wine.
Some
aromas
can fool your
palate, making it think that it's tasting
something
sweet or sour. Wines that have very
fruity
aromas
can seem
sweet: take two dry wines, one that has very
fruity
aromas, and one that is less aromatic, and
taste them side
by side - the fruitier wine will seem sweeter, even if both wines
have exactly the same
residual sugar content.
|
|
|
|
(*) For a good wine glossary and dictionary, follow this LINK
|
|
|
|
c. Taste and Touch in the Mounth: 
The
taste receptors (or buds) of the tongue can discern only five
tastes:
salty,
sweet,
bitter, sour, and a newly-identified
taste, umami, that is still not totally understood..
Saltiness is rarely
experienced in wine.
Sweetness is sensed by the
taste buds at the
tip of the tongue.
Bitterness is sensed at the very back of the
tongue near the opening of the throat, and
sourness at the sides
of the middle of the tongue.
Bitteness is usually discerned in
the
aftertaste of a wine, since it is only when the wine reaches
the
Bitteness
buds at the very back of the tongue near the throat
that this
taste is discerned. In the center of the tongue are
receptors for all four tastes, but fewer of each, so you have less
taste in that area of the tongue. The four "tastes" we
mentioned in the Introduction to
wine tasting -- tannicity,
acidity,
alcohol and "gras" or "moelleux"
(roundness in the mouth) -- do not correspond to these four real
tastes that the tongue is capable of discerning. In English, we
unfortunately do not have a good word for these gustative
sensations that are experienced not by the
taste buds, but by
other receptors in mouth (chemical and touch) receptors. Let's
examine the four gustative sensations one at a time:
|
|
|
|
|
Vocabulary: |
|
acidity: flat,
fresh,
lively, nervous |
|
alcohol:
light, present, generous, very generous,
hot, burning |
|
fat,
fatness/richness: firm,
round, ample |
|
TOP |
|
d. Balance
Balance
of tastes:
sweetness
balances
acidity, and vice versa. For this reason, we put
sugar into lemon juice to make it more palatable (lemonade). Many people put a lemon slice in their Coca Cola to make it less
sweet and more pleasant to drink.
Sweetness also
balances
bitteness. A cube of
sugar makes coffee and tea less
bitter.
Balance of sensations:
fatness or
richness
balances astringency. In North America, we put milk in tea and coffee, because the
fats in the milk make the astringence of the coffee and tea less noticeable. Astringence tends to accentuate tartness, and vice versa. Heat (alcohol)
balances tartness (acidity), which is felt as
freshness, and vice versa. A wine with a strong "moelleux" (for example, a dessert wine) needs an equally strong
acidity to keep the wine from seeming heavy.
The temperature at which we serve wine also helps to
balance the flavors in the wine. We serve white wines at fairly cool temperatures because the cold accentuates the
acidity, a quality we enjoy in white wines. Cold also downplays the
sweetness of off-dry white wines or white dessert wines. A white wine that is too
warm will seem flat and lifeless for lack of
acidity, and a
sweet white wine that is served
warm will seem heavy and overly
sweet. Serving a red wine at a cold temperature will have the same effect of accentuating the
acidity, but in red wines, the cold also accentuates the tannins and make them seem
harsh. This is fine for
light-bodied wines with little tannins, but for more structured wines, service at a warmer temperature will make the tannins more
supple. A red wine served too warm, for instance at room temperature, will lack
freshness (not enough
acidity), seem overly
alcoholic, and lessen the impact of the tannins to give an overall impression of flabbiness and lack of
structure. It takes a skilled taster to be able to tell the difference between a wine that is truly unbalanced in and of itself, and one that is
balanced but is being served at the wrong temperature!
|
|
|
|
Balance of white vs. red wine:  The
play of tastes and sensations determines the overall
balance of
the wine. The sensation of smoothness in a wine often is a
result of a good
balance of tastes and sensations, where no one
taste or sensation sticks out. However, it is important to note
that an absolute
balance is not always desirable in wine. In
white wines, we value the
freshness that
acidity brings to the
wine - they make white wine refreshing and balance any
sweetness
that can be too dominant in the absence of tannins. So the
desirable balance of a white wine will lean a bit toward
acidity. What differentiates red wine from white are its
tannins, and many red wines have a good deal of astringency as a
result of their tannins. Tannins give
structure and complexity
to red wines, and help them age well. So the desirable balance
of red wine will lean toward astringence. For these reasons, the finish, or last impression left in the mouth, of a white wine
tends to be freshness, and the
finish of a red wine tends to be astringence.
Balance of wines based on region or climate: wines from Northern French climates and regions (what we call "régions septentrionales") tend to have a higher
acidity than wines from Southern climates or regions. The
balance of these wines will therefore lean a bit toward
acidity. The Southern wine regions ("régions méridionales"), with their
hot and sunny climates, tend to produce grapes that are higher in
sugar content and lower in
acidity. The higher the
sugar content, the more
alcohol that will be produced during the vinification process. The
balance of Southern wines will be a bit more
alcoholic than Northern wines. It is up to the experienced wine taster to be able to tell the difference between a Chateauneuf-du-Pape red that is
balanced, even though the wine seems somewhat
alcoholic (which is normal for these wines), and a Chateauneuf-du-Pape red that is so alcoholic that it dominates the other tastes and sensations of the wine, and is therefore unbalanced; the same holds true for a nervous Muscadet that is well
balanced for a Muscadet, and another that is so acid that it seems sour and difficult to drink.
|
|
|
|
An important component of balance - concentration:
the concentration of a wine plays an important role in the overall
balance of the wine. Wine is 80-90% water. The remaining 10-20% of the wine contains all the aromatic and
taste components that make wine enjoyable to drink (the dry matter of the fruit). The closer the water content gets to 90%, the less "good stuff" (what the French call "matière", or matter) there is in the wine. A higher water content usually results from poor viticultural practises that emphasize quantity rather than quality. High yields =
watery wine, lower yields = more concentrated wine. In a wine that is diluted, any small imbalance of tastes or sensations will be accentuated: a Chablis, for example, will seem more acid than usual, and a Chateauneuf-du-Pape even more alcoholic. This is not to say that a wine that has a good concentration of fruit will always be well-balanced, but concentration does play a mitigating role in the
balance of a wine.
Concentration of fruit is one of the factors that give a wine a long persistance on the
palate. Persistance is one of the best measures of how long a wine can be kept and aged. Concentration is one of the factors that contribute to the perception of
body in a wine.
It is important to understand that
body is not necessarily a sign of quality in a wine. What many people would refer to as "light bodied" wines, such as the wines of the Touraine in the Loire Valley, or the reds of Burgundy, are very fine wines, they are just in a different style than the fuller-bodied wines of Bordeaux or the south of France. In France, we enjoy wines for what they are, and many
lighter-bodied styles of wine go better with many dishes than more
full-bodied wines, which would be too heavy and overpower many dishes.
|
|
TOP |
|
e. Body:
The perception of
body in a wine is the result of a combination of concentration and several other factors
Viscosity or unctuousness: mostly a function of the
sugar content of a wine, it makes the wine more dense, less fluid, and therefore gives a sense of greater volume or
body;
Fatness/richness: the moelleux of a wine, as explained above;
Concentration of fruit (as mentioned above)
Tannins: the tannins in red wine give a certain
body to these wines. Generally, the more
tannic a wine, the fuller bodied it will be.

Many people will describe a wine with a high
alcohol content as being "full-bodied". The
alcohol content is part of the moelleux, and is therefore only one of the elements that creates
body in a wine. But a high
alcohol content will give an immediate impression of
body to a wine.
Sugar and
glycerol content also contribute to the
richness or roundness of a wine. The current fashion for "full-bodied" wines has led some New World winemakers to place too much emphasis on the
alcohol content of their wines, and to leave higher than traditional amounts of
residual sugar in their wines. Unfortunately, a high
alcohol content and
sweetness without concentration of fruit or
acidity, tannins and moelleux to
balance it will produce a sensation of
hotness and heaviness that will be unpleasant to the
taste.
|
|
|
|
f. Other tactile sensations in wine :
We speak of the sensation of silkiness, softness, velvetiness or smoothness of wines in the mouth. Dessert wines that have a high viscosity offer a certain kind of smoothness, but dry wines can also be velvety and
soft in the mouth. One of the prime causes of this pleasant sensation is an excellent
balance of tastes and sensations in the mouth. Another is a good moelleux. Tannins in red wine give a
texture to red wines that goes well with the meatiness and course
texture of red meats. Finally, the quality of the tannins in red wine can contribute to a silkiness on the
palate that is pleasant and desirable.
|
|
|
|
g. Quality of Tannins
In the vinification of red wines, the
winemaker strives to
extract tannins that are fine and
elegant. We often speak of "good" tannins and "bad" tannins in France. Good tannins are a result of mature grapes and good vinification practices; they give red wines
structure,
balance and
body, and help them age well. Bad tannins have a
bitter or
vegetal ("green")
taste, are aggressive,
hard and dry, a result of grapes picked before full maturity and/or badly vinified. Try chewing on a fruit stem or pits, and you'll see what these tannins
taste like. Tannins that are fine and
elegant and not dry or
hard will remain that way throughout the life of the wine, becoming more and more blended with the other elements of the wine. Tannins that are
harsh and dry with a large grain will never become fine and
elegant, no matter how many years you age the wine. |
|
|
|
Vocabulary: |
|
Tannins (quantity): none, present,
astringent,
tannic, very
tannic |
|
Tannins (quality): Grain/texture: coarse,
rough, fine, very fine |
|
|
|
Overall: aggressive,
rustic,
harsh, dry,
plump, fine,
elegant
|
|
|
|
h. Evolution of sensations and tastes in the mouth over time
In the gustative analysis of a wine, we talk about the attack, the middle of the mouth, and the
finish of the wine. These correspond to the evolution of the wine over time in the mouth, as it first hits your tongue (the attack), to when it crosses the main part of the tongue and
palate (the middle of the mouth), to the final impression of the wine when it is expelled or swallowed (the
finish). When discussing these three stages, we refer again to the sensations or tastes of the
acidity, roundness,
alcohol and tannins (if present) in the mouth. Thus a wine can have an
attack
that is
fresh (acidity) or
sweet (sugar, often the case if there is any noticeable amount of
residual sugar, since it is on the tip of the tongue that there is the greatest concentration of
taste buds sensitive to
sweetness), etc. In the stage of the middle of the mouth, we often notice the overall mouth-feel of the wine, the
body and concentration of the wine, as well as the
balance of the tastes. At the
finish, we notice the last impression that the wine leaves on our
palate after we've swallowed it or spit it out. It can be a final impression of freshness (acidity), astringence (tannins), or heat (alcohol) - sometimes it's a combination of two of these. Some people refer to a "clean"
finish, which means that no one element stands out at the end, and that the mouth is left feeling
fresh and clean.
Coming somewhat after the "finish" of the wine is the
aftertaste. In the
aftertaste, we are not referring to sensations but rather tastes, and the one usually encountered (if there is an
aftertaste at all) is
bitterness.
Bitterness is felt at the very back of the tongue and the throat (that's where the greatest concentration of
taste buds that sense
bitterness
are located). Sometimes there can be a lingering
sweetness after a wine is expelled, but that is not usually associated with an "after"-taste as with a remnant of the
taste of the wine itself. An
aftertaste of
bitterness
is always a defect in a wine, a sign of poor quality.

Remember that you will always smell the wine better once it is in your mouth than when it is in your glass by retro-olfaction. Also, as the wine heats up in your mouth (an environment whose temperature is, of course, over 98° F), it releases its
aromas more easily.
|
|
II. More about aromas
|
|
TOP
|
|
In wine tastings, there is often too much of an emphasis placed on identifying particular
aromas in a wine. One's perceptions of
aromas are very individual. Each person has his own threshold for sensing the molecules that are responsible for the
aromas in wine; for example, some people are very sensitive to
oaky
or
woody notes, others will
hardly detect them at all. What one person identifies as lemon, another will identify as grapefruit. The naming of
aromas being such a subjective and individual thing, it becomes less important to name particular
aromas than to be able to name families of
aromas (see these listed below).
In addition, what is most important in gauging the quality of a wine is not the particular
aromas, but the complexity, intensity and quality of the
aromas.
Complexity: the greater the number of families of
aromas that are represented in a wine, the greater the complexity of the wine. A wine that is purely
fruity will be said to have simple
aromas. A wine that has
fruity and spicey
notes can be said to have
rich aromas, a step up from simple. Finally, a wine that has
fruity, spicey, animal and forrest floor aromas could be called complex. The greater the complexity of
aromas, the greater the quality of the wine.
Intensity: how strong are the
aromas of the wine you're tasting? If you can smell the
aromas before the glass even gets to your
nose, the wine is very aromatic. If you need to put your
nose into the glass to smell the
aromas, but the
aromas come through very well once your
nose is there, the wine is aromatic. If you have to swirl a little before the
aromas come out, the wine is somewhat aromatic. If after swirling your wine quite a bit the
aromas still are hardly perceptible, the wine can be said to be not aromatic, or closed. Wines can go through a period (often in their youth) when they do not reveal themselves, and seem to have little to no bouquet or
aromas. Aerating a young wine can help it
open up; in other cases, it's just a matter of waiting to see how it develops. In wines that are not worthy of aging, it may just be a wine that has little aromatic interest, and therefore a wine of inferior quality. |
|
|
|
Vocabulary: |
|
simple,
rich, complex, very complex |
|
very aromatic, aromatic, somewhat aromatic, not aromatic or closed |
|
unpleasant, banal,
rustic, ordinary, well bred, pleasant, fine,
elegant, distinguished,
rich, pure, typical, atypical |
|
|
|
Quality of
aromas:
this is perhaps the mostspeak of
elegant
aromas, or a
aromas that have great finesse or purety; and then
rustic or ordinary
aromas
that are not very pleasant or subtle.
Elegant
aromas are intense without being vulgar, that are delightful and
fresh, or that retain the pure and true (in other words,
aromas
of fruit or flowers that are like smelling the real fruit or
flowers themselves).
Rustic aromas are strong and brash, sometimes almost unpleasant. Think of the difference between smelling Chanel No. 5 and then smelling a cheap "Eau de
Toilette" from the drugstore. Elegance, finesse and purety of
aromas are signs of quality in a wine. |
|
|
|
Types of aromas:
The grape is naturally not a particularly aromatic fruit, but it possesses a tremendous aromatic potential that is brought out all along the chain of fabrication from grape to wine. The
aromas that will be brought out differ from variety to variety, and depending on the soil and climate of the place in which the grapes were grown. Certain aromatic components (molecules) will be liberated, and others supressed, at each stage of vinification. We can identify in the
nose of the wine the stage at which the molecule was produced.
Primary (or
Varietal)
aromas: these are the
aromas of the grape itself before it has undergone any transformation. Grapes like Muscat and Viognier retains their
fresh and
fruity primary
aromas once they have been (skillfully) made into wine.
Secondary (or Fermentary) aromas: other
aromas are created during the vinification process, when aromatic esters are created by the
fermentation process. These secondary
aromas, which make up the primary aromatic profile of young wines, include
yeast, brioche, toasty or grilled odors (typical in Chardonnay, for example, even if it has never been aged in
oak, and not to be confused with the tertiary
aromas of
oak), milk,
Tertiary
aromas (or
aromas of aging): other aromatic molecules are produced as wines age as a result of micro-oxygenation and esterification. As a wine ages, its
aromas pass from those of
fresh fruit to those of cooked fruit or fruit jam, fruit soaked in
alcohol, or dried fruits and nuts;
vegetal or animal
aromas can develop (barnyard, forrest
floor); and if the wine was aged in
oak
barrels, the original
light and
fresh aromas of
oak,
light toasty or grilled odors, caramel or brioche can turn to leather, blond
tobacco, or stronger empyreumatic smells of
tar, burnt wood, coffee, chocolate.
|
|
|
|
Vocabulary: |
|
Families of
aromas: |
Fruits (lemon, raspberry) |
|
Flowers (acacia, violet) |
Spices (pepper, cloves) |
|
Animal (barnyard, leather, gamey) |
Empyreumatic/Roasted (burnt, coffee, grilled
toast)
|
|
Vegetal (green pepper, fern) |
Pastry (brioche, almond paste) |
|
Milk (yoghurt, cheese, milk) |
Forrest floor (dead leaves, mushroom) |
|
Petrochemical (tar, gasoline) |
Mineral (flint, stone, chalk) |
|
|
|
NOTE:
Some
aromas can be classified in several families, such as mushroom (forest floor or
vegetal); or
vanilla (pastry or spices); or
tar, (empyreumatic and petrochemical), etc. |
|
TOP
|
|
Persistence or
length on the palate:
as we discussed previously, we count the number of seconds ("caudalies") that the
aromas of a wine persist on the
palate after the wine is expelled (spit out or swallowed). A long persistence of
aromas of a wine on the
palate is an indication of quality in a wine, and is one of the factors that helps us differentiate a "little" wine from a "great" wine. A long persistence usually indicates a wine that has excellent cellaring potential. For all these reasons, measuring the persistence of a wine on the
palate is an important element in the final evaluation of a wine at the end of your dégustation. |
|
|
|
Vocabulary: |
|
Tannins (quantity): none, present, astringent,
tannic, very
tannic |
|
Grain/texture: coarse,
rough, fine, very fine |
|
Overall: aggressive,
rustic,
harsh,
dry,
plump, fine,
elegant |
|
|
|
Read another excellent article by Matt Kramer on what makes a good wine
taster:
www.winespectator.com
|
|
|
|
© 2002, Gilded Age, Inc.
|
|
|
|
Back to Studies, Articles, Wine Chemistry, Archives page |
|
|
|
|
TOP
|
|
|
|
|
Judging a wine once it's in the mouth is a complex exercise. Remember that the main goal of the gustative examination of a wine is to judge the balance of the wine. We gauge not only the relative strength of the tastes of
sweetness,
bitterness
and
sourness (the tastes) in the wine, but also the relative strength of the tactile sensations brought about by the contact of the tannins,
acidity,
alcohols and moelleux in the wine with the tongue and
palate. When we judge the balance of a wine, we are judging, at the same time, the juxtaposition of the tastes in the wine and the sensations of astringence, tartness,
richness and heat created by the wine: |
|
|
|
* Tannins in red wine can be experienced as a tactile sensation, felt at the center of the tongue as astringence. Tannins also have a
taste, that of
bitterness, usually discernable in wine when they are unskillfully
extracted or unripe at the time of
harvest, or when the tannicity of the wine is excessive and not
balanced by the other gustative components of the wine; |
|
|
|
*
alcohol as a tactile sensation is felt as heat or burning in the mouth or throat.
Alcohol also has a slightly
sweet
taste (both ethyl
alcohol and
glycerol, both present in wine), but that
taste is not easily discernable in most wines; |
|
|
|
*
Fatness/richness of a wine (in French, the moelleux) is also experienced by the sense of touch within the mouth. This sensation, one of filling and coating the mouth, is due mostly to the
alcohol content of the wine, but the
glycerol content and the
sugar content also contribute to it. Although the
alcohol, glycerol and
sugar all
taste
sweet, we concentrate on the tactile sensation when analysing and describing the
body (see below) of a wine. The
fatness or
richness of a wine are partly responsible for the smoothness or silkiness of a wine in the mouth; |
|
|
|
*
Acidity is experienced much like tannicity is. In most cases, we will have only a tactile sensation as a result of the
acidity of a wine, a sensation of puckering that causes salivation. Only when the
acidity is excessive or particularly unbalanced in regards to the other components will we be compelled to describe the wine as "sour", which is nearly always a sign of poor quality. |
|
|
|

|
|
photos FWE |
|