threebikesmcginty
Corn Fed Hick...
- Location
- ...on the slake
I don't drink wine very often but my favourite flavour is screw top.
BookmarkedCan I recommend Hedonist Wines? Not too much choice - but I've not had a bad wine from them. They're based about 5 miles from us.
It depends, and some times.Does red wine really need to 'breathe' for a while before drinking?
Does white wine really need to be chilled?
Last night's bottle of Pinot Grigio definitely got more quaffable as it crept up to room temp.
It's not pretentious bollox, it's chemistry...
We posed this question to Marjorie King, Sensory Research Technician with Agriculture Canada...
First of all, red and white wines have different chemical compositions that influence their sensory perception and their sensory traits. The aromatic white wines and these are things like Chenin Blanc, Gewurztraminer, some of the Rieslings, you serve them the coolest so it would be about 8°C. They have a relatively higher proportion of aldehydes and esters and terpenes that fill up the head space of the glass and at the lower temperature. So they will project their fruitiness which is a big part of the appreciation of those wines at a much lower temperature. The cooler temperature accentuates a bit of the acid and so, it creates a crispier, fresher kind of impression of the wine. If you do a Chardonnay-type wine or a wine in that style that is oaked, it can be served at a slightly higher temperature, so maybe 10°C, maybe 11°C. And the red wines, we have the phenolic compounds in the red wines, but with the polyphenols and the tannins, contribute to the structure in the mouth feel and that’s very much linked to the appreciation in a good quality of red wine. These components are better tasted at a slightly higher temperature. So if you chill the red wine, it’s not just that the flavour components don’t come out into the head space as well, but the tannins and the polyphenols feel much more astringent and harsher in the mouth and the acid is accentuated as well. If you serve a red wine that’s really warm, what you get then is the alcohol starts to dominate the head space in the glass and you get the perception of an alcoholic wine, and you don’t appreciate all the fruity components that are in the wine. So if we serve those at about 19°C, you get a much more pleasant overall balanced wine.
And yes while anybody is free to enjoy any beverage how ever they like, for god's sake they drink ice tea over here (devils urine), there are actual reasons why things taste better if served 'correctly'.
Which demonstrates that the language we have to describe flavours isn't up to the job. I bet that if he'd asked "what is this wine?" (factual, not descriptive) he'd have had a different response. The fact that the chap himself now makes wine shows that even he doesn't believe that attempting to refine flavours is nonsense.http://www.realclearscience.com/blog/2014/08/the_most_infamous_study_on_wine_tasting.html
In a sneaky study, Brochet dyed a white wine red and gave it to 54 oenology (wine science) students. The supposedly expert panel overwhelmingly described the beverage like they would a red wine. They were completely fooled
That's like saying that vegetables aren't very nice. "White wine" covers everything from blue nun to oaked Aussie Chardonnay via Sauternes, white Bordeaux and pinot grigio. Cheap white wine is, in my experience, less likely to be pleasant than cheap red, but once you get into the £7 a bottle and beyond sweet spot there are some delicious things.Yebbut white wine simply isn't very nice is it?
craft Ale - like real Ale, only in a smaller bottle with a bigger price!But only good quality expensive "Craft Ale"
(Craft Ale is the beer equivalent of Proseco.....)
Can I recommend Hedonist Wines? Not too much choice - but I've not had a bad wine from them. They're based about 5 miles from us.
I don't like hoppy hipster beers, but I do occasionally like a chilled bottle of Lambrusco on a hot day.....I say bullshit - "taste better" is completely subjective. Ask anyone who doesn't like hoppy hipster beers.
Posting from Crouch End North London - AKA Bourgeois Central - I can assure you that Prosecco is very much the preferred tipple of the locals, with Cava a perfectly acceptable substitute. VFM is a key criterion. We are 'squeezed', remember. (It would be vulgar to pretend that one is not.)It is the lower middle classes that drink Prosecco, the real middle class only drink French sparkling wine, or an English if Freddie's cousin owns the vinyard.
Need? No.
But oxygenation and changing the temperature of wine certainly changes its flavour. In general (as someone's said), tannic wines benefit from oxygenation because oxygenated tannin is less bitter - but the best way to do that is by decanting or by swirling in the glass. White wines tend to be made specifically to drink chilled, so if you want to get the flavour the maker intended it's better to chill it.