Introduction to Wine Judging A preparatory course for AWS Certified Wine Judge Training

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Introduction to Wine Judging A preparatory course for AWS Certified Wine Judge Training Joseph A. Fiola, Ph.D. Specialist in Viticulture and Small Fruit UMD/Maryland Cooperative/WMREC Gary C. Pavlis, Ph.D. Agricultural Agent of Atlantic County Rutgers Cooperative Extension

Introduction to Wine Judging Joseph A. Fiola, Ph.D. Specialist in Viticulture and Small Fruit UMD/Maryland Cooperative/WMREC Gary C. Pavlis, Ph.D. Agricultural Agent of Atlantic County Rutgers Cooperative Extension

Objective: To be a better wine evaluator and to be prepared to take the AWS CWJT I

WINE JUDGMENT OBJECTIVE Objectivism: external, real, worthwhile things rather than thoughts or feelings; tasting or judging for competition Based on ability, experience, communication Must identify differences in wine Serious business!! SUBJECTIVE Personal taste and preference, like-dislike criteria Personal like - dislike criteria is not the objective standard of judging. Subjective evaluation is the main stumbling block in becoming a good wine judge.

CHARACTERISTICS OF A GOOD WINE JUDGE Establish, know, and understand sense abilities and thresholds Know wines including grapes, types and styles Develop philosophy that all grapes can make good wine Consistent application of objective qualitative factors DO NOT USE LIKE-DISLIKE CRITERIA Communicative knowledge and application of accepted standard nomenclature Aroma Wheel

Appearance Factors: Clarity (tilt glass - look at edge white background) Clear, Hazy, Cloudy/Dull Brilliant Color Hue, Saturation, Purity straw to golden; purple to red; oxidized; age Intensity Reflectance Body density or legs 6

Aroma and Bouquet Aroma: Odor of the grape variety Bouquet: Odor of winemaking, aging Yeast selection Oak: Vanilla, toasty, smoky, etc. Malo-lactic: Buttery, sometimes cheesy Bottle Aging: Time in the bottle, storage conditions UC Davis AROMA Wheel 7

Physiology of the Nose olfaction and taste Olfactory epithelium: roof of nasal passage. Olfactory receptors respond to gas molecules Taste and smell chemoreceptors respond to molecules that are dissolved in mucus fluid Careful with decongestants! Two routes of smells, nose and post-nasal Most taste actually smell perceived on the tongue. 40 million smell receptors vs. 1 million for taste Receptor cells die and regenerate 30-60 days Certain viruses kill cells

Aroma Thresholds THRESHOLD--concentration level in air above which we sense the aroma. Concentration (ppb) A B C Threshold (1 odor unit) Odor unit = concentration (ppb)/threshold > 1, you smell it! Thresholds not constant, good days/bad days, colds, etc. Chemoreceptor health Learn your thresholds!!!

Smell Testing a Wine Sniff quickly and deeply--aroma of volatile compounds Swirl one or two quick revolutions-- increase surface area for less volatile compounds (bouquet) Hold wine in mouth--warming releases odor molecules, draw air through the wine to release still more volatiles. Trust FIRST IMPRESSIONS DON T HOLD TOO LONG in mouth AVOID FATIGUING taste receptors 10

Wine Aroma Wheel copyright A C Noble 1990,2002; www.winearomawheel.com

Wine Aroma Wheel - Fruity Section copyright A C Noble 1990,2002; www.winearomawheel.com

Taste Four Basic Taste Sensations Sweetness - sugar, alcohol, glycerin (short) Acid - malic, citric, tartaric (lingers) Salt Bitter astringency; phenols Quality Components Balance Sweet/acid; Body Tactile, fullness, alcohol Flavor (combination with aroma) Fruit flavors 13

Making Sense of Taste Smith, D.V. Margolskee, R.F. Scientific American March, 2001 http://www.sciam.com/2001/0301issue/0301smith.html

Flavor = Smell + Taste

What is in Wine? Water 85-90% Ethanol preserve, flav enhan, psych 7-14% Sugars sweetener, enhancer 0.1-15% Acids Organic, inorganic; crisp sour 0.6-1% Tannins pigmnts, phenols; health; pres; 0.6-1% Volatile compounds aroma, bouquet +200 Proteins vitamins, minerals little 16

Flavor = Taste + Smell Taste Chemical % sweet sugar 20 sour & acid H+ Ion &acids 1 salty Sodium ion.1 bitter phenolics.01 Smell Chemical % grape aminoacetophenone.000001 orange linalool.0000001 apple et 2-mebutyrate.00000001 bell pepper i-bu-2-mepyrazine.000000001

Spit Need only small volume to evaluate Coat mouth Moderation 18

Aftertaste Quality finish usually is what distinguishes quality wines Length of finish Type fruity/descriptors acid or sugar smooth/rough/bitter tannin level (primarily for reds) 19

Taste Four Basic Taste Sensations Sweetness - sugar, alcohol Acid Bitter astringency; phenols Wine Quality Evaluation 3 wines 20 point AWS Scoring sheet 20

AWS 20 Point Scale Appearance 3 - Excellent 2 -Good 1- Poor 0 - Objectionable Aftertaste 3 -Excellent 2 -Good 1-Poor 0 -Objectionable Aroma and Bouquet 6 - Extraordinary 5 - Excellent 4 -Good 3 - Acceptable 2 - Deficient 1-Poor 0 - Objectionable Overall Impression 2 - Excellent 1-Good 0 -Poor Taste and Texture 6 - Extraordinary 5 - Excellent 4 -Good 3 - Acceptable 2 - Deficient 1-Poor 0 - Objectionable 21

Home study Four Components Sweetness - sugar, alcohol Acid Bitter astringency; phenols Wine Quality Evaluation Americans, French Hybrids, Fruit, Specialty, Vinifera Flaws Practice Practice Practice Read 22

Joseph A. Fiola, Ph.D. Specialist in Viticulture and Small Fruit UMD/Maryland Cooperative WMREC 18330 Keedysville Rd Keedysville MD 21756 jfiola@umd.edu www.grapesandfruit.umd.edu