Cream Sherry Information Blog

2:42 AM

Writing about Cream Sherry was indeed a spontaneous decision on my part. I solemnly hope that this was a wise decision that I had made.

A Short Wine Summary

Choosing Wine on a First Date








First dates are nerve wracking enough without having to worry about what wine to choose to impress your new friend...

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Making Red Wine








Jim Bruce has been making growing grapes and making wine since 1974.  You too can grow your own wine grapes.  Intere...


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How to Grow Grapes for Excellent Wine


I think it quite safe to say that more has been written about the cultivation of grapes than has - or ever will be - written about any other fruit. Th...


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Featured Wine Items

Champagne Krayer "Cuvee Tradition"


The grapes for the Krayer "Cuvee Tradition" Champagne (80% Pinot Noir, 20% Chardonnay) were grown in the Marne department, which is known as the cradle of Champagne. Blessed with well-draining gravelly and chalky soils, the vines grow deep and strong to produce grapes of great quality for the Krayer Champagne House. Their "Cuvee Tradition" blend has a great golden color with a warm bread nose. The wine itself has a lot of forward fruit that gives way to a creamy back palate and a long finish. Great for your holiday parties or for any special celebrations throughout the year! You can buy this French sparkling wine online. KCNV KCNV


Price: 69.99 USD



Champagne and Caviar Celebration Bucket Deluxe


Two champagne flutes, dark chocolates, water crackers and Caviar. Add a bottle of bubbly and this bucket turns any occasion into a celebration, (Bucket color may vary). Includes Cristalino Sparkling Brut which is sure to be a pleasure for most folks. CCB04 CCB04D


Price: 87.95 USD



Chardonnay Spaetlese


A most unusual wine from the Rheinhessen. A very rare find in this late harvest Chardonnay. Spaetlese means late harvest, typically German or Austrian style of wine making. What is not common here is the Chardonnay grape. The combination of the Chardonnay and Spaetlese makes this a rare wine, delicious, full bodied, very complex, very well suited for aging in the cellar. Excellent with seafood and sauces, Chicken a la King, Sweet and Sour chicken, you get the idea? Serve chilled 45-50 F. Great gift to buy online! GWCSW704 GWCSW704


Price: 27.95 USD



Another Great Article

Wine Tasting - Is It Really An Art?



In the last of our series on wines we're going to discuss an area that quite frankly few people know anything about.


Wine tasting.


Most people would probably think, what is there to tasting a wine? You take a sip, swish it around in your mouth and then swallow. Tastes either good or bad. Right?


Well, not exactly. There is actually an art to wine tasting and in this article we're going to cover the basics of just how to taste wine and determine just how good or bad it is.


Let's start with exactly why we do swish the wine around in our mouth when we taste it. At first it was thought that the reason we do this is because we thought that different areas of the tongue detected different flavors. Actually, this is not the case.


The front and back of the tongue have taste buds, but they don't specialize in a particular taste sensation. All taste buds can detect sour, sweet, bitter and salty flavors. In order to get the most out of your taste buds you swish the wine in your mouth so that all your taste buds, including your sense of smell, get involved in the detection of the finer flavors of the wine.


What a lot of people also don't realize is that much of what we taste is actually because of our sense of smell. Think about it. How good does your food taste to you when you eat while having a bad cold? Many times you can hardly taste anything at all. Medical science has actually determined that 75% of what we taste if because of our sense of smell.


Wine tasting itself is an art and while a lot of it is subjective wine tasters do follow some general rules or guidelines when judging how good a wine actually is. Learning these techniques is very easy and if you already like wine then that makes it even easier.


There are 3 steps in wine tasting


1. Look. They say you can tell a lot about a wine just by the way it looks. To look at a wine you should pour it into a clear glass in front of white background like a tablecloth, napkin or piece of paper. This makes it easy to examine the color. As for the color itself, white wines are actually green, yellow or brown. The more color usually indicates more flavor. Red wines are not just red. They can be pale red to deep brown. While a red wine improves with age the opposite is true for white wines.


2. Smell. Smell the wine. You do this in two steps. First you take a quick whiff to get a general idea of the smell and then take one very deep whiff. This will give you a better idea of the smell. After doing this wine tasters sit back and think about the smell for a long while before actually tasting it.


3. Taste. Finally, taste the wine. To do this you take a small sip and swish the wine around in your mouth. You then think about the taste. Is it light or rich or smooth or harsh. And then after the initial taste there is the aftertaste. How long did it last? Was it pleasant or was it a bitter aftertaste?


After the above steps many wine tasters assign a point score to each step. This ultimately is how they evaluate the wine and determine if it is a quality wine. Expert tasters say the more you do this the better you get at it.

About the Author


Michael Russell

Your Independent guide to Wine


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International Wine

 

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