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» The New New Packaging
» What Makes a Wine so Expensive…Or so Cheap.
» What's In A Name ?
» First Time Entertaining Tips
» Hosting a Wine Tasting
» How to Open a Bottle.
» Sipping With Salads
» Stock your Shelves
» Super Sunday with a Latin Sizzle
» The Cocktail Hour: Which Wines Make the Best Apéritifs?
» Wedding Bell Bubbly
» Wine & Legendary Love Foods
» Wine Party Basics: An Indispensable Guide for Hosts and Hostesses
» How Long Will it Last?
» That Old Bottle In the Basement -- What's It Worth?
» Time in a Bottle When Should I Drink My Wine?
» “Not Too Sweet, Please”
» Gorgeously Green: Sustainable, Organic & Biodynamic® Wines Take Off
» Light Reds For Summer
» More than a Toast: Break Out the Bubbly Every Day.
» New Years Resolutions
» Que Syrah, Syrah
» Riesling Renaisannce
» Rosé: Wine of Your Dreams
» Spanish Wines: Delicious and a Little Bit Different
» Summertime and the Sipping is Easy...
» The Unofficial Guide to Reading a Califiornia Wine Label
» Varietals 101
» Warming Up to Reds
» How to Order Wine in a Restaurant
» Navigating The Wine List
» Navigating the Wine List
» Wines by the Glass: Rx for Wine Emergencies
» Burgers and Beyond, Wine Comes to the Barbecue
» Holiday Encores with Wine
» Ideal Serving Temperatures for Great Tasting Wine.
» Keeping Your Cool: Ordering Wine on a Date
» Making the Most of a Glass of Wine
» Oak and Wine
» Port, Sherry and Other Fortified Wines
» Seven Simple Ways To Break Out Of A Wine Rut
» Sweet Versus Fruity
» Talking About Wine
» What is Quality Wine?
» What Is Umami?
» Wine Tasting
 
Wine 101

Hosting a Wine Tasting

To set up a wine tasting first pick as broad or specific a theme as you like. Beginning tasters might select several wines from a different varietal (grape type) to demonstrate the differences between them. Another option is to choose several wines made from a single varietal to show how a grape type can yield different-tasting wines depending on where the vineyards are located. More experienced tasters hold "vertical" tastings, where wines of a single vineyard or winery in a range of vintages are sampled to determine the best vintage years.

The number of wines served at a tasting varies, but eight to ten is typical. To avoid being influenced by perceptions based on label information, hide the identities of the wines by covering the bottles with foil or placing them in bags sealed with elastic bands or tape. Use numbers or letters for identification (a "blind" tasting). Also provide drinking water, bread or crackers, paper and writing utensils, and containers or "spit buckets" for spitting or dumping excess wine.

At an informal tasting, guests can sample the wines and discuss them one at a time. This saves on glasses and cleanup. Or, to compare the wines side-by-side, serve them in a "flight" (a group of wines for tasting), which requires each person be supplied with a glass for each wine tasted. To serve, pour a small portion--one to two ounces--into clean stemware. If there are both whites and reds to taste, serve the whites first. When everyone has finished tasting the flight, it's time to discuss the wines. Don't hesitate to express your opinions. Even inexperienced tasters can be uncannily accurate when it comes to wine.

Scoring the wines or naming favorites will yield a group consensus on the best wines of the bunch. The results can be surprising, such as when the least expensive wine takes top honors.


Jean T. Barrett writes for wineanswers.com and on epicurean subjects (wine, food, travel) for several magazines including Sky (the Delta Airlines inflight magazine), Wine Spectator and Westways. Ms. Barrett has served as a judge at national and international wine competitions, including the Dallas Morning News Wine Competition and the Los Angeles County Fair Wines of the Americas Competition. In addition to her magazine work, she has collaborated on three books with television personality Colin Cowie, and wrote the text for two Wine Spectator wine guides. She lives in Los Angeles.Jean Barrett