acetic: Wines, no matter how well made, contain quantities of
acetic
acidity that have a
vinegary smell. If there is an excessive amount of acetic acidity, the
wine will have a vinegary smell and be a flawed, acetic wine.
acidic: Wines need natural
acidity to taste
fresh and
lively, but an excess of
acidity results in an acidic wine that is
tart and sour.
acidity: The acidity level in a wine is critical to its
enjoyment and livelihood. The natural acids that appear in wine are
citric, tartaric, malic, and lactic. Wines from hot years tend to be
lower in acidity, whereas wines from cool, rainy years tend to be high
in acidity. Acidity in a wine can preserve the wine's freshness and keep
the wine
lively, but too much
acidity, which masks the wines flavours and compresses its texture, is a
flaw.
aftertaste: As the term suggests, the
taste left in the mouth when one swallows is the aftertaste. This word
is a synonym for length or finish. The longer the aftertaste lingers in
the mouth (assuming it is a pleasant taste), the finer the quality of
the wine.
aggressive: Aggressive is usually
applied to wines that are either high in acidity or have
harsh tannins, or both.
angular: Angular wines are wines that lack roundness,
generosity, and depth. Wine from poor vintages or wines that are too
acidic are often described as
being angular.
aroma: Aroma is the smell of a young wine before it has had
sufficient time to develop nuances of smell that are then called its
bouquet. The word aroma is
commonly used to mean the smell of a relatively young, unevolved wine.
astringent: Wines that are astringent
are not necessarily bad or good wines. Astringent wines are
harsh and coarse to taste,
either because they are too young and
tannic and just need time to
develop, or because they are not well made. The level of tannins (if it
is harsh) in a wine contributes to its degree of astringency.
austere: Wines that are austere are generally not terribly
pleasant wines to drink. An austere wine is a
hard, rather dry wine that
lacks richness and generosity. However, young Rhônes are not as austere
as young Bordeaux.
backward: An adjective used to describe (1) a young largely
unevolved, closed, and undrinkable wine, (2) a wine that is not ready to
drink, or (3) a wine that simply refuses to release its charms and
personality.
balance: One of the most desired traits in a wine is good
balance, where the concentration of fruit, level of tannins, and
acidity are in total
harmony. Balanced wines are symmetrical and tend to age gracefully.
barnyard: An unclean, farmyard, fecal
aroma that is imparted to a
wine because of unclean barrels or unsanitary winemaking facilities.
berrylike: As this descriptive term
implies, most red wines have an intense berry fruit character that can
suggest blackberries, raspberries, black cherries, mulberries, or even
strawberries and cranberries.
big: A big wine is a large-framed,
full-bodied wine with an
intense and
concentrated
feel on the palate. Most red Rhône wines are big wines.
blackcurrant: A pronounced smell of
blackcurrant fruit is commonly associated with certain Rhône wines. It
can vary in intensity from faint to very deep and rich.
body: Body is the weight and fullness of a wine that can be
sensed as it crosses the palate.
full-bodied wines tend
to have a lot of alcohol, concentration, and glycerin.
Botrytis cinerea: The fungus that
attacks the grape skins under specific climatic conditions (usually
alternating periods of moisture and sunny weather). It causes the grape
to become super concentrated because it causes a natural dehydration.
Botrytis cinerea is essential for the great sweet white wines of Barsac
and Sauternes. It rarely occurs in the Rhône Valley because of the dry,
constant sunshine and gusty winds.
bouquet: As a wine's
aroma becomes more developed from bottle aging, the aroma is
transformed into a
bouquet
that is hopefully more than just the smell of the grape.
brawny: A hefty, muscular,
full-bodied wine with
plenty of weight and flavor, although not always the most
elegant or refined sort of
wine.
briery: I think of California Zinfandel when the term briery
comes into play, denoting that the wine is
aggressive and rather
spicy.
brilliant: Brilliant relates to the color
of the wine. A brilliant wine is one that s clear, with no haze or
cloudiness to the color.
browning: As red wines age, their color changes from
ruby/purple to dark ruby, to medium ruby, to ruby with an amber edge, to
ruby with a brown edge. When a wine is browning it is usually fully
mature and not likely to get better.
carbonic maceration: This
vinification method is used to make
soft, fruity, very accessible wines. Whole clusters of grapes are
put into a vat that is then filled with carbonic gas. This system is
used when fruit is to be emphasized in the final wine in contrast to
structure and tannin.
cedar: Rhône reds can have a
bouquet that suggests either
faintly or overtly the smell of cedarwood. It is a complex aspect of the
bouquet.
chewy: If a wine has a rather dense,
viscous texture from a high
glycerin content, it is often referred to as being chewy. High-extract
wines from great vintages can often be chewy, largely because they have
higher alcohol hence high levels of glycerin, which imparts a
fleshy mouthfeel.
closed: The term closed is used to denote that the wine is
not showing its potential, which remains locked in because it is too
young. Young wines often close up about 12-18 months after bottling, and
depending on the vintage and storage conditions, remain in such a state
for several years to more than a decade.
complex: One of the most subjective descriptive terms used, a
complex wine is a wine that the taster never gets bored with and finds
interesting to drink. Complex wines tend to have a variety of subtle
scents and flavors that hold one's interest in the wine.
concentrated: Fine wines, whether they
are light-, medium-, or
full-bodied, should have concentrated flavors. Concentrated denotes
that the wine has a depth and richness of fruit that gives it appeal and
interest.
Deep is a synonym for
concentrated.
corked: A corked wine is a flawed wine that has taken on the
smell of cork as a result of an unclean or faulty cork. It is
perceptible in a
bouquet
that shows no fruit, only the smell of
musty cork, which reminds me
of wet cardboard.
cuvée: Many producers in the Rhône Valley produce special,
deluxe lots of wine or a lot of wine from a specific grape variety that
they bottle separately. These lots are often referred to as cuvées.
decadent: If you are an ice cream and chocolate lover, you
know the feeling of eating a huge sundae of rich vanilla ice cream
lavished with hot fudge and real whipped cream. If you are a wine
enthusiast, a wine loaded with opulent, even
unctuous layers of fruit,
with a huge
bouquet, and a
plump, luxurious texture can be said to be decadent.
deep: Essentially the same as
concentrated,
expressing the fact that the wine is
rich, full of
extract, and mouth filling.
delicate: As this word implies, delicate wines are light,
subtle, understated wines that are prized for their shyness rather than
for an extroverted, robust character. White wines are usually more
delicate than red wines. Few Rhône red wines can correctly be called
delicate.
demi-muid: 650-liter Burgundy barrels which are essentially
the equivalent of three regular barrels.
diffuse: Wines that smell and taste unstructured and
unfocused are said to be diffuse. When red wines are served at too warm
a temperature they often become diffuse.
double decanting: This is done by
first decanting the wine into a decanter and then rinsing the original
bottle out with non-chlorinated water and then immediately repouring the
wine from the decanter back into the bottle. It varies with the wine as
to how long you cork it.
dumb: A dumb wine is also a
closed wine, but the term
dumb is used more pejoratively.
Closed wines may need only time to reveal their richness and
intensity. Dumb wines may
never get any better.
earthy: May be used in both a negative and a positive sense;
however, I prefer to use earthy to denote a positive
aroma of fresh, rich, clean
soil. Earthy is a more intense smell than
woody or truffle scents.
elegant: Although more white wines than red are described as
being elegant, lighter-styled, graceful,
balance red wines can be
elegant.
extract: This is everything in a wine besides water, sugar,
alcohol, and
acidity.
exuberant: Like extroverted, somewhat
hyper people, wines too can be gushing with fruit and seem nervous and
intensely vigorous.
fat: When the Rhône has an exceptionally hot year for its crop
and the wines attain a super sort of maturity, they are often quite
rich and
concentrated, with low
to average
acidity. Often
such wines are said to be fat, which is a prized commodity. If they
become too fat, that is a flaw and they are then called
flabby.
flabby: A wine that is too
fat or obese is a flabby wine.
Flabby wines lack structure and are heavy to taste.
fleshy: Fleshy is a synonym for
chewy,
meaty, or beefy. It denotes
that the wine has a lot of
body,
alcohol, and
extract, and
usually a high glycerin content. Châteauneuf-du-Pape and Hermitage are
particularly fleshy wines.
floral: Wines made from the Muscat or Viognier grape have a
flowery component, and occasionally a red wine will have a floral scent.
focused: Both a fine wine's
bouquet and flavor should be
focused. Focused simply means that the scents, aromas, and flavors are
precise and clearly delineated. If they are not, the wine is like an
out-of-focus picture-diffuse,
hazy, and possibly problematic.
forward: An adjective used to describe wines that are (1)
delicious, evolved, and close to maturity, (2) wines that border on
being flamboyant or ostentatious, or (3) unusually evolved and/or
quickly maturing wines.
foudre: Large oak barrels that vary enormously in size but
are significantly larger than the normal oak barrel used in Bordeaux or
the piece used in Burgundy. They are widely used in the Rhône Valley.
fresh: Freshness in both young and old wines is a welcome and
pleasing component. A wine is said to be fresh when it is
lively and cleanly made. The
opposite of fresh is
stale.
fruity: A very good wine should have enough
concentration of fruit
so that it can be said to be fruity. Fortunately, the best wines will
have more than just a fruity personality.
full-bodied: Wines rich in
extract, alcohol, and
glycerin are full-bodied wines. Most Rhône wines are full-bodied.
garrigue: In the southern Rhône Valley and Provence, this is
the landscape of small slopes and plateaus. This Provençal word applies
to these windswept hilltops/slopes inhabited by scrub-brush and
Provençal herb outcroppings. The smell of garrigue is often attributed
to southern Rhône Valley wines. Suggesting more than the smell of herbes
de Provence, it encompasses an
earthy/herbal concoction of varying degrees of intensity.
green: Green wines are wines made from underripe grapes; they
lack richness and generosity as well as having a
vegetal character. Green
wines are infrequently made in the Rhone, although vintages such as 1977
were characterized by a lack of ripening.
hard: Wines with abrasive,
astringent tannins or
high
acidity are said to be
hard. Young vintages of Rhône wines can be hard, but they should never
be harsh.
harsh: If a wine is too hard it is said to be harsh. Harshness
in a wine, young or old, is a flaw.
hedonistic: Certain styles of wine are
meant to be inspected; they are introspective and intellectual wines.
Others are designed to provide sheer delight, joy, and euphoria.
Hedonistic wines can be criticized because in one sense they provide so
much ecstasy that they can be called obvious, but in essence, they are
totally gratifying wines meant to fascinate and enthrall-pleasure at its
best.
herbaceous: Many wines have a
distinctive herbal smell that is generally said to be herbaceous.
Specific herbal smells can be of thyme, lavender, rosemary, oregano,
fennel, or basil and are common in Rhône wines.
herbes de Provence: Provence is
known for the wild herbs that grow prolifically through- out the region.
These include lavender, thyme, sage, rosemary, and oregano. It is not
just an olfactory fancy to smell many of these herbs in Rhône Valley
wines, particularly those made in the south.
hollow: Also known as shallow, hollow wines are diluted and
lack depth and concentration.
honeyed: A common personality trait of specific white Rhône
wines, a honeyed wine is one that has the smell and taste of bee's
honey.
hot: Rather than meaning that the temperature of the wine is too
warm to drink, hot denotes that the wine is too high in alcohol and
therefore leaves a burning sensation in the back of the throat when
swallowed. Wines with alcohol levels in excess of 14.5% often taste hot
if the requisite depth of fruit is not present.
inox vats: This is the French term for
stainless steel vats that are used for both fermentation and storage of
wine.
intensity: Intensity is one of the most
desirable traits of a high-quality wine. Wines of great intensity must
also have
balance. They
should never be heavy or cloying. Intensely
concentrated great
wines are alive, vibrant, aromatic, layered, and texturally compelling.
Their intensity adds to their character, rather than detracting from it.
jammy: When wines have a great
intensity of fruit from
excellent ripeness they can be jammy, which is a very
concentrated, flavorful
wine with superb
extract. In
great vintages such as 1961, 1978, 1985, 1989, 1990, and 1995, some of
the wines are so
concentrated that they are said to be jammy.
Kisselguhr filtration system:
This is a filtration system using diatomaceous earth as the filtering
material, rather than cellulose, or in the past, before it was banned,
asbestos.
leafy: A leafy character in a wine is similar to a
herbaceous character only
in that it refers to the smell of leaves rather than herbs. A wine that
is too leafy is a
vegetal or
green wine.
lean: Lean wines are slim, rather streamlined wines that lack
generosity and fatness but can still be enjoyable and pleasant.
lively: A synonym for
fresh or
exuberant, a
lively wine is usually young wine with good
acidity and a
thirst-quenching personality.
long: A very desirable trait in any fine wine is that it be long
in the mouth. Long (or length) relates to a wine's finish, meaning that
after you swallow the wine, you sense its presence for a long time.
(Thirty seconds to several minutes is great length.) In a young wine,
the difference between something good and something great is the length
of the wine.
lush: Lush wines are
velvety,
soft, richly
fruity wines that are both
concentrated and
fat. A lush
wine can never be an
astringent or
hard wine.
massive: In great vintages where there is a high degree of
ripeness and superb concentration, some wines can turn out to be so
big,
full-bodied, and
rich that they are called
massive. A great wine such as the 1961 or 1990 Hermitage La Chapelle is
a textbook example of a massive wine.
meaty: A
chewy,
fleshy wine is also said to
be meaty.
monocepage: This term describes a wine
made totally of one specific varietal.
monopole: Used to denote a vineyard owned exclusively by one
proprietor, the word monopole appears on the label of a wine made from
such a vineyard.
morsellated: Many vineyards are
fragmented, with multiple growers owning a portion of the same vineyard.
Such a vineyard is often referred to as a morsellated vineyard.
mouth-filling:
Big,
rich,
concentrated wines that
are filled with fruit
extract
and are high in alcohol and glycerin are wines that tend to texturally
fill the mouth. A mouth-filling wine is also a
chewy,
fleshy,
fat wine.
musty: Wines aged in dirty barrels or unkept cellars or exposed
to a bad cork take on a damp, musty character that is a flaw.
nose: The general smell and
aroma of a wine as sensed
through one's nose and olfactory senses is often called the wine's nose.
oaky: Many red Rhône wines are aged from 6 months to 30 months
in various sizes of oak barrels. At some properties, a percentage of the
oak barrels may be new, and these barrels impart a
toasty, vanillin flavor and
smell to the wine. If the wine is not
rich and
concentrated, the
barrels can overwhelm the wine, making it taste overly oaky. Where the
wine is rich and concentrated and the winemaker has made a judicious use
of barrels, however, the results are a wonderful marriage of fruit and
oak.
off: If a wine is not showing its true character, or is flawed
or spoiled in some way, it is said to be "off."
overripe: An undesirable characteristic; grapes left too long
on the vine become too ripe, lose their
acidity, and produce wines
that are heavy and
balance.
This can happen frequently in the hot viticultural areas of the Rhône
Valley if the growers harvest too late.
oxidized: If a wine has been excessively exposed to air
during either its making or aging, the wine loses freshness and takes on
a stale, old smell and taste.
Such a wine is said to be oxidized.
peppery: A peppery quality to a wine is usually noticeable in
many Rhône wines that have an
aroma of black or white pepper and a pungent flavor.
perfumed: This term usually is more applicable to fragrant,
aromatic white wines than to red wines. However, some of the dry white
wines (particularly Condrieu) and sweet white wines can have a strong
perfumed smell.
pigéage: A winemaking technique of punching down the cap of
grape skins that forms during the beginning of the wine's fermentation.
This is done several times a day, occasionally more frequently, to
extract color, flavor, and tannin from the fermenting juice.
plummy:
Rich,
concentrated wines can
often have the smell and taste of ripe plums. When they do, the term
plummy is applicable.
ponderous: Ponderous is often used as a
synonym for
massive, but in
my usage a massive wine is simply a
big,
rich, very
concentrated wine with
balance, whereas a ponderous
wine is a wine that has become heavy and tiring to drink.
precocious: Wines that mature quickly
are precocious. However the term also applies to wines that may last and
evolve gracefully over a long period of time, but taste as if they are
aging quickly because of their tastiness and
soft, early charms.
pruney: Wines produced from grapes that are
overripe take on the
character of prunes. Pruney wines are flawed wines.
raisiny: Late-harvest wines that are meant to be drunk at the
end of a meal can often be slightly raisiny, which in some ports and
sherries is desirable. However, a raisiny quality is a major flaw in a
dinner wine.
rich: Wines that are high in
extract, flavor, and
intensity of fruit.
ripe: A wine is ripe when its grapes have reached the optimum
level of maturity. Less than fully mature grapes produce wines that are
underripe, and overly mature grapes produce wines that are
overripe.
round: A very desirable character of wines, roundness occurs in
fully mature wines that have lost their youthful,
astringent tannins, and
also in young wines that have
soft
tannins and low
acidity.
savory: A general descriptive term that denotes that the wine
is round, flavorful, and
interesting to drink. shallow: A weak, feeble, watery or diluted wine
lacking concentration is said to be shallow.
sharp: An undesirable trait, sharp wines are bitter and
unpleasant with
hard, pointed
edges.
silky: A synonym for
velvety or
lush, silky
wines are
soft, sometimes
fat, but never
hard or
angular.
smoky: Some wines, either because of the soil or because of the
barrels used to age the wine, have a distinctive smoky character. Côte
Rôtie and Hermitage often have a roasted or smoky quality.
soft: A soft wine is one that is
round and fruity, low in
acidity, and has an absence
of
aggressive,
hard tannins.
spicy: Wines often smell quite spicy with aromas of pepper,
cinnamon, and other well-known spices. These pungent aromas are usually
lumped together and called spicy.
stale: Dull, heavy wines that are
oxidized or lack balancing
acidity for freshness are
called stale.
stalky: A synonym for
vegetal, but used more frequently to denote that the wine has
probably had too much contact with the stems, resulting in a
green, vegetal, or stalky
character to the wine.
supple: A supple wine is one that is
soft,
lush,
velvety, and very
attractively
round and tasty.
It is a highly desirable characteristic because it suggests that the
wine is harmonious.
tannic: The tannins of a wine, which are extracted from the
grape skins and stems, are, along with a wine's
acidity and alcohol, its
lifeline. Tannins give a wine firmness and some roughness when young,
but gradually fall away and dissipate. A tannic wine is one that is
young and unready to drink.
tart:
Sharp,
acidic,
lean, unripe wines are called
tart. In general, a wine that is tart is not pleasurable.
thick:
Rich,
ripe,
concentrated wines that
are low in
acidity are often
said to be thick.
thin: A synonym for shallow; it is an undesirable characteristic
for a wine to be thin, meaning that it is watery, lacking in
body, and just diluted.
tightly knit: Young wines that have
good
acidity levels, good
tannin levels, and are well made are called tightly knit, meaning they
have yet to open up and develop.
toasty: A smell of grilled toast can often be found in wines
because the barrels the wines are aged in are charred or toasted on the
inside.
tobacco: Some red wines have the scent of fresh tobacco. It
is a distinctive and wonderful smell in wine.
troncais oak: This type of oak comes
from the forest of Troncais in central France.
unctuous:
Rich,
lush, intense wines with layers
of
concentrated,
soft,
velvety fruit are said to be
unctuous.
vegetal: An undesirable characteristic, wines that smell and
taste vegetal are usually made from unripe grapes. In some wines, a
subtle vegetable garden smell is pleasant and adds complexity, but if it
is the predominant character, it is a major flaw.
velvety: A textural description and synonym for
lush or
silky, a velvety wine is a
rich,
soft, smooth wine to taste. It
is a very desirable characteristic.
viscous: Viscous wines tend to be relatively
concentrated,
fat, almost
thick wines with a great
density of fruit
extract,
plenty of glycerin, and high alcohol content. If they have balancing
acidity, they can be
tremendously flavorful and exciting wines. If they lack acidity, they
are often
flabby and heavy.
volatile: A volatile wine is one that smells of vinegar as a
result of an excessive amount of
acetic bacteria present. It is a seriously flawed wine.
woody: When a wine is overly
oaky it is often said to be
woody. Oakiness in a wine's
bouquet and taste is good up to a point. Once past that point, the
wine is woody and its fruity qualities are masked by excessive oak
aging.