Posts Tagged ‘flavor’

Red wine

Monday, March 12th, 2012

Take a glass of this drink helps you emotionally, physically and mentally. Contrary to what may be thought, this type of wine has many benefits.

Red wine is a beverage obtained by fermentation of the grape . The fermentation is caused by the action of yeast, which transforms the sugars of the grapes in ethyl alcohol and gas as carbon dioxide. However, the realization of the wine also depends on climate, altitude, latitude and hours of daylight. Knowledge of the wine is called enology. The science that deals with the vine and its cultivation is called ampelología.
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Wine glass and glassware

Monday, January 23rd, 2012

wine-glassThus unleashing the correct flavor of a wine you need depending on the wine glass and a corresponding. Nowadays wine of colorless, thin and uncut stemware is drunk. The advantage of a clear drinking glass is placed on the hand. One can judge the wine color is better, without touching the glass. This would in fact change the temperature of the wine. The fragrances can also develop a better swing in such glasses when.

White wine is drunk from small glasses, white wine because red wine as opposed to approximately 8-10 ° C is drunk. A small glass has the advantage that it takes only a little wine. This makes the glasses emptied quickly and not heat up so quickly. Because red wine is drunk warm, at about 16-18 ° C, one can enjoy it from larger glasses. For in a larger glass can develop the flavor better.
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Semillon Chardonnay for the whites against

Monday, January 9th, 2012

The vineyards of Australia in 2002 was about 160,000 ha (including grapes). About 40% of production in the white wines. On approximately 62,000 acres of vines are the white varieties Chardonnay (strong and spicy) with approximately 24,000 ha, Semillon (elegant) with approximately 6,000 acres, Riesling (fruity, sweet and noble) with approximately 4,000 hectares and Sauvignon Blanc (fine aromatic) grown to about 2,800 ha.
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Tempranillo Red Wine

Wednesday, December 21st, 2011

tempranilloSpain’s major contribution to red wine, Tempranillo is indigenous to the country and is rarely grown elsewhere. It is the dominant grape in the red wines from Rioja and Ribera del Duero, two of Spain’s most important wine regions.

In Rioja, Tempranillo is often blended with Garnacha, Mazuelo and a few other minor grapes. When made in a traditional style, Tempranillo can be garnet-hued, with flavors of tea, brown sugar and vanilla. When made in a more modern style, it can display aromas and flavors redolent of plums, tobacco and cassis, along with very dark color and substantial tannins. Whatever the style, Riojas tend to be medium-bodied wines, offering more acidity than tannin.
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Shiraz Red Wine

Monday, December 19th, 2011

Shiraz-red-wineHermitage and Côte-Rôtie in France, Penfolds Grange in Australia–the epitome of Syrah is a majestic red that can age for half a century. The grape seems to grow well in a number of areas and is capable of rendering rich, complex and distinctive wines, with pronounced pepper, spice, black cherry, tar, leather and roasted nut flavors, a smooth, supple texture and smooth tannins. In southern France it finds its way into various blends, as in Châteauneuf-du-Pape and Languedoc-Roussillon. Known as Shiraz in Australia, it was long used for bread-and-butter blends, but an increasing number of high-quality bottlings are being made, especially from old vines in the Barossa Valley.
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Semillon white wine

Monday, December 19th, 2011

sémillon-white-wineOn its own or in a blend, this white can age. With Sauvignon Blanc, its traditional partner, this is the foundation of Sauternes and most of the great dry whites found in Graves and Pessac-Léognan; these are rich, honeyed wines,. Sémillon is one of the grapes susceptible to Botrytis cinerea. Australia’s Hunter Valley uses it solo to make a full-bodied white that used to be known as Hunger Riesling, Chablis or White Burgundy. In South Africa it used to be so prevalent that it was just called “wine grape,” but it has declined drastically in importance there.
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Sauvignon blanc White Wine

Monday, December 19th, 2011

sauvignon-blanc-white-wineAnother white with a notable aroma, this one “grassy” or “musky.” The pure varietal is found mainly in the Loire, at Sancerre and Pouilly-Fumé, As part of a blend, the grape is all over Bordeaux, in Pessac-Léognan, Graves and the Médoc whites; it also shows up in Sauternes. New Zealand has had striking success with Sauvignon Blanc, producing its own perfumed, fruity style that spread across North America and then back to France.
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Pinot Noir

Sunday, December 18th, 2011

Pinot-NoirPinot Noir, the great grape of Burgundy, is a touchy variety. The best examples offer the classic black cherry, spice, raspberry and currant flavors, and an aroma that can resemble wilted roses, along with earth, tar, herb and cola notes. It can also be rather ordinary, light, simple, herbal, vegetal and occasionally weedy. It can even be downright funky, with pungent barnyard aromas. In fact, Pinot Noir is the most fickle of all grapes to grow: It reacts strongly to environmental changes such as heat and cold spells, and is notoriously fussy to work with once picked, since its thin skins are easily bruised and broken, setting the juice free. Even after fermentation, Pinot Noir can hide its weaknesses and strengths, making it a most difficult wine to evaluate out of barrel. In the bottle, too, it is often a chameleon, showing poorly one day, brilliantly the next.
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Mourvedre red wine

Thursday, December 8th, 2011

mourvedre-red-wineAs long as the weather is warm, Mourvèdre likes a wide variety of soils. It’s popular across the south of France, especially in Provence and the Côtes-du-Rhône, and is often used in Châteauneuf-du-Pape; Languedoc makes it as a varietal. Spain uses it in many areas, including Valencia.
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Merlot red wine

Thursday, December 8th, 2011

merlotMerlot is the red-wine success of the 1990s: its popularity has soared along with its acreage, and it seems wine lovers can’t drink enough of it. It dominates Bordeaux, except for the Médoc and Graves. Though it is mainly used for the Bordeaux blend, it can stand alone. In St.-Emilion and Pomerol, especially, it produces noteworthy wines, culminating in Château Pétrus. In Italy it’s everywhere, though most of the Merlot is light, unremarkable stuff. But Ornellaia and Fattoria de Ama are strong exceptions to that rule. Despite its popularity, its quality ranges only from good to very good most of the time, though there are a few stellar producers found around the world.
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