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Wine Vocabulary
The
following is a glossary of wine
related terms, which you may
find useful in your quest for
that perfect vintage…By no means
is this list exhaustive, it’s
simply intended as a starting
point for further research.
·
Aging… All
wines age to some extent, first
in the cellar (in a barrel,
cask, tank or vat) and then in
the bottle. Many times, if
properly stored, wine will
improve somewhat with aging.
It’s good to keep in mind though
that 90% of the wine produced in
the world is as good when six
months old as it is ever likely
going to be, and many wines will
actually deteriorate with age
rather than improve. As a rule
of thumb, white wines are better
consumed young, and fine red
wines, such as red Bordeaux,
Cabernet Sauvignons, Barolo,
vintage port and others can need
upwards of five years in order
to achieve the qualities for
which they are best known.
·
Aperitif… A
French word now used in a very
general way to describe almost
any alcoholic beverage consumed
before a meal to whet the
appetite.
·
Barolo… One
of the finest red wines of
Italy, full bodied, richly
textured, complex and long
lived, with a distinctive
bouquet and taste often
described as reminiscent of
truffles and faded roses.
·
Beaujolais…
One of the most popular and best
loved wines of France, nearly
always red and produced in the
Beaujolais district in southern
Burgundy.
·
Blending…
The practice of mixing wines
from different grape varieties,
geographical origins or
vintages, or similar wines with
somewhat different
characteristics.
·
Blush Wine…
A term used informally to
describe a category of wines
whose color varies from pale
salmon to pink, and which are
usually simple, light-bodied and
slightly sweet.
·
Bordeaux… A
town of 225,000 on the Garonne
River in southwestern France.
This is the home of one of the
most prolific wine growing areas
in the world.
·
Bouquet…
This can be defined, quite
simply, as the way a wine
smells.
·
Breathing…
The practice of aerating a
bottle of wine (particularly red
wine) before consuming it.
Although the neck of a bottle of
wine is so small that it really
allows little air to mix with
the content of the bottle. The
proper way to aerate wine (when
possible) would be to pour the
contents into a decanter or
other clean container. Uncorking
and leaving a bottle of wine to
“breathe” is largely
ineffective.
·
Burgundy…
An extensive region in France
that includes Chablis, the Cote
d’Or, the Cote Chalonnaise, and
Beaujolais.
·
Cru… A
French word meaning “growth”,
when applied to wine, it refers
to a specific vineyard and, by
implication, one of superior
quality as in the grand crus
and premiere crus of
Burgundy,
·
Domaine…
French for “Estate”, most often
used in Burgundy where it refers
to all the vineyards making up a
single property.
·
Enology…
The entire science of wine
production, from the harvest and
vinification to bolling, the
name is derived from Oeneus, the
Greek god of Calydon and
originally the god of wine.
·
Hybrid… In
Viticulture, the result of a
cross between two different
grape varieties.
·
Late Harvest…
A term used in California and
elsewhere to denote wines made
from especially ripe grapes, or,
in many instances, from grapes
infected with Botrytis
Cinerea or noble rot (see
below).
·
Loire… The
longest and most scenically
beautiful river in France, which
traverses 600 miles through some
of the best wine country. Wines
that grow in its vicinity are
sometimes collectively referred
to as Vins de la Loire.
·
Micro Climate…
A term that refers to the
combination of soil-gravel,
chalk and clay-and such factors
as altitude, angle of slope,
drainage, and orientation toward
the sun, their influences on
quality have been recognized for
nearly 2,000 years.
·
Napa… The
most celebrated wine country in
California.
·
Noble Rot…
Also known as Botrytis
Cinerea, this is a
beneficial mold responsible for
the special taste of such wines
as Sauternes, form the Bordeaux
district of France and others,
The mold forms on the skins of
ripe grapes under specific
conditions – humidity
alternating the dry heat – and
sends filaments into the grapes,
perforating the skin.
·
Oak… The
one wood in which wine can
almost always be counted on to
improve, oak is used for such
small and medium sized
containers as barrels, casks,
pipes and the like. All the fine
red wines of the world owe at
least a little of their taste to
the oak in which they’ve been
aged.
·
Phylloxera…
Whereas Noble Rot can help
grapes develop wonderful and
distinctive flavors, phylloxera
is a devastating insect, which
destroys grape crops.
·
Sediment…
The deposit that most red wines
tend to throw as they age in
bottle, it is a natural part of
an old wine as the shell is part
of an egg. It should not be
confused with cloudiness,
haziness or lack of clarity, any
of which potentially indicate
that a wine is not fit to drink.
·
Supple… A
term that describes an attribute
of quality wines – smooth and
drinkable, yet with character
and backbone.
·
Tannin…
Technically a group of
non-organic compounds, known as
phenolic compounds, that exist
in bark, wood, roots, seeds, and
stems of many plants. The
tannins present in many red
wines are extracted from the
grape skins and seeds – and, if
not previously removed, the
stems during fermentation.
Tannin imparts structure,
flavor, texture, and complexity
to a wine, and since it is an
antioxidant also enables a wine
to age.
·
Vinifera…
By all odds the most important
of the 40 odd species that make
up the genus vitis.
Appropriately named “wine
bearer”, vitis vinifera
is responsible for virtually all
of the world’s wines. |