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re: Proof: All Wine Tastes the Same

Posted on 6/24/13 at 5:28 pm to
Posted by TH03
Mogadishu
Member since Dec 2008
171080 posts
Posted on 6/24/13 at 5:28 pm to
then I ask you the same thing.

would you be able to give reviews like this?


quote:

It defines its own space. There’s plenty of new oak, but the fruit, acid and tannins stand up to it. This is sharp and tangy; cranberry and raspberry, strawberry and citric acids all playing their part



quote:

Bouquet of medium red fruit, toast, plum and tobacco. Black fruit, spice, pepper and coffee flavors. Smooth finish with easy tannins and a cool streak through it. Not a dense wine, but a flavorful and good one.



quote:


Lush and delicious, this richly fruited wine roars from glass with a serious, yet still sexy plum, chocolate, spice and cedar nose. Plush tannins and an even mouthfeel full cherry, plum and cocoa flavors, and this impressive first release finishes long and dry.


because it sounds like BS to me
Posted by Powerman
Member since Jan 2004
162264 posts
Posted on 6/24/13 at 5:30 pm to
quote:



because it sounds like BS to me

Anything with that much description to describe a beverage is definitely BS
Posted by lilwineman
Baton Rouge
Member since Dec 2008
1053 posts
Posted on 6/24/13 at 5:43 pm to
Actually that's exactly how I think when it comes to wine: a tasting grid for the court of master sommeliers requires a very in depth flavor profile. However, the average person can not recollect the aromas they've experienced in such a way typically. I meet a lot of people in the industry that are the same way as you, they enjoy it red or white a little this a little that. Do they know that Martha's Vineyard from Heitz cellars is known for their menthol/eucalyptus undertone every vintage? How about the layers of roasted meat and gaminess from a muscular hermitage? The elegant and floral minerality of Margaux vs the fuller aromas of graphite and cedar from paulliac. Or the slight vegetal tinge all Chilean wines will tend to have because of the type of elongated growing season they require to get their grapes ripe even though they are never "fully ripe." These are the things I study and must know. Now it doesn't apply to 99% of the people in the world and its certainly an obsession to the point, but that doesn't mean it's not completely feasible or possible just because its behind your comprehension...aromatics are in the nose of the beholder and I will never tell someone they are wrong in their assessment because of that as someone shouldn't tell me I'm crazy because of the scents of fresh agave and cranberry preserve and black pepper that cross my nose in a fleury from Beaujolais.
Posted by Zappas Stache
Utility Muffin Research Kitchen
Member since Apr 2009
38797 posts
Posted on 6/24/13 at 5:45 pm to
quote:

because it sounds like BS to me




Beer Description. I do know people that can pick some of these flavors out. My wife has a palette like that. But after one beer, or wine, your taste buds change. The next one is going to taste different.


quote:

A - gorgeous ruby, copper color. Different hues are picked up when looked at in different lights. Little head and lacing.

S - sweet mother of cherries. Straight up morello cherries all over the hizzy. The usual sour/lambic aromas are present (vinegar, barnyard funk, acidic wine), but it's the cherries that comes through and sets this apart.


quote:

T - boom. Cherries, mang. Tart, puckering vinegary, wine, Pinot, gruner veltliner (comes to mind), oak is there but a little hidden.

M - refreshing, crisp, light champagne-like effervescence. Great lingering finish. For me, not overly sour but perfectly tart.

This post was edited on 6/24/13 at 5:47 pm
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