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Easily
Transition from
Wine
Lover
to
Wine
Expert
Wine
Glossary
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Wine
tasters love to use specific
wine terms and wine terminology
that can be a bit confusing
or intimidating to beginners.
Wine "jargon"
is not all that esoteric
once you know some of the
descriptive terms, what
they mean and how they are
used in talking or writing
about wine. Is the wine
thin or fat? Is it oaky
or peppery? Does it have
acidity? Becoming familiar
with some of these and other
wine terms and wine tasting
terminology helps in understanding
what a wine is like, and
makes it easier and more
fun to taste and enjoy wine.
Listed below are some of
the words frequently encountered
at wine tastings or in publications
on and off that web that
cover the subject. Or click
here for a listing of
wine
pronunciations.
A
B
C D
E F
G H
I J
K L
M N
O P
Q R
S T
U V
W X
Y Z
A
Acidity
The quality of wine that
gives it its crispiness
and vitality. A proper balance
of acidity must be struck
with the other elements
of a wine, or else the wine
may be said to be too sharp
- having disproportionately
high levels of acidity -
or too flat - having disproportionately
low levels of acidity.
Acrid
A tasting a wine with overly
pronounced acidity. This
is often apparent in cheap
red wines
Aftertaste
A tasting term for the taste
left on the palate after
wine has been swallowed.
Aging barrel
A barrel, often made of
oak, used to age wine or
distilled spirits.
Alcohol
Generally refers to ethanol,
a chemical compound found
in alcoholic beverages.
It is also commonly used
to refer to alcoholic beverages
in general.
Altar wine
The wine used by the Catholic
Church in celebrations of
the Eucharist.
Alternative wine
closures
Various substitutes used
in the wine industry for
sealing wine bottles in
place of traditional cork
closures.
Amphora
A type of ceramic vase,
used for transporting and
storing wine in ancient
times.
Angel's share
The portion of a wine in
an aging barrel that is
lost to evaporation.
Anthocyanin
Phenolic pigments that give
red wine its colour.
A.O.C.
Abbreviation for Appellation
d'Origine Contrôlée,
literally a wine whose Appellation
is of controlled origin,
as specified under French
law. The AOC laws specify
and delimit the geography
from which a particular
wine (or other food product)
may originate and methods
by which it may be made.
The regulations are administered
by the Institut National
des Appellations d'Origine,
or INAO.
A.P. number
Abbreviation for Amtliche
Prüfnummer, the official
testing number displayed
on a German wine label that
shows that the wine was
tasted and passed government
quality control standards.
Appellation
A geographical based term
to identify where the grapes
for a wine were grown.
Aroma
The smell of a wine. The
term is generally applied
to younger wines, while
the term Bouquet is reserved
for more aged wines.
ATF
Abbreviation for the Bureau
of Alcohol, Tobacco and
Firearms, a United States
government agency which
is primarily responsible
for the regulation of wines
sold and produced in the
United States.
B
BarrelsBalance
The harmonious relationship
of the components of wine
- acids, fruit, tannins,
alcohol, etc. - resulting
in a well proportioned,
or well balanced, wine.
Barrel
A hollow cylindrical container,
traditionally made of wood
staves, used for fermenting
and aging wine. Sometimes
called a cask.
Barrique
The French name for a 225
litre Bordeaux style barrel.
Baumé
A measure of the sugar concentration
in the juice or wine.
Beeswing
A light sediment, chiefly
mucilage, found in Port.
Bentonite
A type of clay used in wine
clarification.
The Berthomeau Report
Commissioned by French Ministry
of Agriculture to better
position the wine industry
for the future.
Biodynamic wine
Wines produced by the principles
of biodynamic agriculture.
Blanc de Blancs
A white wine, usually sparkling,
made exclusively from white
grapes, often Chardonnay.
Blanc de Noirs
A white wine, usually sparkling,
made from red grapes.
Blending
The mixing of two or more
different parcels of wine
together by winemakers to
produce a consistent finished
wine that is ready for bottling.
Laws generally dictate what
wines can be blended together,
and what is subsequently
printed on the wine label.
Blatina
a red wine grape of Bosnia
and Herzegovina.
Blind tasting
Tasting and evaluating wine
without knowing what it
is.
Bodega
A Spanish wine cellar. Also
refers to a seller of alcoholic
beverage.
Body
The sense of weight imparted
by a wine to the mouth of
a taster. A wine may be
light- or full-bodied.
Botrytis cinerea
See Noble rot.
Bottle
A bottle is a small container
with a neck that is narrower
than the body and a "mouth."
Modern wine bottles are
nearly always made of glass
because it is nonporous,
strong, and aesthetically
pleasing.
Bottle shock
Also known as bottle-sickness,
a temporary condition of
wine characterized by muted
or disjointed fruit flavors.
It often occurs immediately
after bottling or when wines
(usually fragile wines)
are shaken in travel. After
several days the condition
usually disappears.
Bottle variation
The degree to which bottled
wine of the same style and
vintage can vary.
Bouquet
A tasting term for the complex
aromas of an aged wine.
The term is generally not
applied to young wines.
Box wine
Wine packaged in a bag usually
made of flexible plastic
and protected by a box,
usually made of cardboard.
The bag is sealed by a simple
plastic tap.
Brandy
See "Burnt wine".
Brettanomyces
A wine spoilage yeast that
produces taints in wine
commonly described as barnyard
or band-aids.
Bright
Describes a wine that has
high clarity, very low levels
of suspended solids.
Brix
A measurement of the dissolved
sucrose level in a wine.
Brut
A French term for a very
dry champagne or sparkling
wine. Drier than extra dry.
Bung
A stopper used to seal a
bottle or barrel. Commonly
used term for corks.
Burnt wine
Another name for Brandy,
a liquor made from distilled
wine. It is often the source
of additional alcohol in
fortified wines.
Butt
An old English unit of wine
casks, equivalent to about
477 litres (126 US gallons/105
imperial gallons).
California
cult wines
Certain California wines
for which consumers and
others pay higher prices
than those of Bordeaux's
First Growths (Premiers
Crus).
Cabernet Sauvignon
Cabernet Sauvignon is a
variety of red grape mainly
used for wine production,
and is, along with Chardonnay,
one of the most widely-planted
of the world's noble grape
varieties.
Capsule
The plastic or foil that
covers the cork and part
of the neck of a wine bottle.
Carbonic maceration
A winemaking practice of
fermenting whole grapes
that have not been crushed.
Cellaring
To age wine for the purpose
of improvement or storage.
Cellaring may occur in any
area which is cool (12-15°C),
dark, free from drastic
temperature change, and
free from vibrations. Bottled
wines are typically cellared
on their sides.
Champagne flute
A piece of stemware having
a long stem with a tall,
narrow bowl on top.
Chaptalization
A winemaking process where
sugar is added to the must
to increase the alcohol
content in the fermented
wine. This is often done
when grapes have not ripened
adequately.
Chardonnay
A type of wine, one of the
"noble" white
varietals.
Charmat process
The Charmat or bulk process
is a method where sparkling
wines receive their secondary
fermentation in large tanks,
rather than individual bottles
as seen in Méthode
champenoise.
Château
Generally a winery in Bordeaux,
although the term is sometimes
used for wineries in other
parts of the world, such
as the Barossa Valley.
Claret
British name for Bordeaux
wine. Is also a semi-generic
term for a red wine in similar
style to that of Bordeaux.
Clarification
A winemaking process involving
the fining and filtration
of wine to remove suspended
solids and reduce turbidity.
Cleanskin
In Australia, wine bottled
without a commercial label,
usually sold cheaply in
bulk quantities.
Cold Duck
A mixture of red and white
sparkling wine that has
a high sugar content.
Cold stabilization
A winemaking process where
wine is chilled to near
freezing temperatures for
several weeks to encourage
the precipitation of tartrate
crystals.
Cork
A wine bottle stopper made
from the thick outer bark
of the cork oak tree.
Corked
A tasting term for a wine
that has cork taint.
Corkscrew
A tool, comprising a pointed
metallic helix attached
to a handle, for drawing
Corks from bottles.
Cork taint
A type of wine fault describing
undesirable aromas and flavours
in wine often attributed
to mould growth on chlorine
bleached corks.
Country wine
See "Fruit wine".
Crackling
Semi-sparkling wine; slightly
effervescent. Also called
frizzante.
Crémant
French sparkling wine not
made in Champagne region.
Crust
Sediment, generally potassium
bitartrate, that adheres
to the inside of a wine
bottle.
Cult wines
Wines for which committed
buyers will pay large sums
of money because of their
desirbility and rarity.
Cuve
A large vat used for fermentation.
Cuvee
The pressing, or a blending
of several wines.
D
Decanting
The process of pouring wine
from its bottle into a decanter
to separate the sediment from
the wine.
Dégorgement
The disgorging or removal
of sediment from bottles that
results from secondary fermentation.
Demi-sec
Moderately sweet to medium
sweet sparkling wines.
Devatting
The process of separeting
red must from pomace, which
can happen before or after
fermentation.
Dessert wine
Varies by region. In the UK,
a very sweet, low alcohol
wine. In the US by law, any
wine containing over 15% alcohol.
Diurnal temperature
variation
The degree of temperature
variation that occurs in a
wine region from daytime to
night.
DO
1. The abbreviation for Denominación
de Origen, or "place
name." This is Spain's
designation for wines whose
name, origin of grapes, grape
varieties and other important
factors are regulated by law.
2. The abbreviation for dissolved
oxygen, the degree of oxygen
saturation in a wine, which
strongly affects oxidation
of the wine and its ageing
properties.
DOC
The abbreviation for Denominazione
di Origine Controllata, or
"controlled place name."
This is Italy's designation
for wine whose name, origin
of grapes, grape varieties
and other important factors
are regulated by law. It is
also the abbreviation for
Portugal's highest wine category,
which has the same meaning
in that country.
DOCG
The abbreviation for Denominazione
di Origine Controllata e Garantita,
or controlled and guaranteed
place name, which is the category
for the highest-ranking wine
in Italy.
Doux
The French word for sweet.
Usually refers to the sweetest
category of sparkling wines.
Drawing off
see Devatting.
Drip dickey
A wine accessory that slips
over the neck of a wine bottle
and absorbs any drips that
may run down the bottle after
pouring - preventing stains
to table cloths, counter tops
or other surfaces.
Dry
Wines with zero or very low
levels of residual sugar.
The opposite of sweet, except
in sparkling wines, where
dry means sweet.
E
Eiswein
German for ice wine, a dessert
wine made from frozen grapes.
en Tirage
French for "in pulling",
refers to the period of time
in which bottled sparkling
wine is rested in contact
with lees generated during
secondary fermentation. Part
of the Méthode Champenoise
process.
Enology
American English spelling
of oenology, the study of
wine.
Estate winery
A United States winery license
allowing farms to produce
and sell wine on-site, sometimes
known as a Farm winery.
Extra dry
A champagne or sparkling wine
with a small amount of residual
sugar (slightly sweet). Not
as dry as Brut.
F
Farm
winery
A United States winery license
allowing farms to produce
and sell wine on-site.
Fault
An unpleasant characateristic
of wine resulting from a flaw
with the winemaking process
or storage conditions.
Fermentation
The conversion of grape sugars
to alcohol by yeast.
Fiasco
The straw-covered flask historically
associated with Chianti.
Fighting varietal
A term that originated in
California during the mid
1980s to refer to any inexpensive
cork-finished varietal wine
in a 1.5 liter bottle.
Fining
A clarification process where
flocculants, such as bentonite
or egg white, are added to
the wine to remove suspended
solids.
Finish
A tasting term for the lingering
aftertaste after a wine has
been swallowed.
Flabby
Tasting term used to indicate
a wine lacking in structure,
often marked by low acidity.
Flagon
A glass bottle that holds
two litres of (usually inexpensive)
table wine.
Flor
The yeast responsible for
the character of dry Sherries.
Fortified wine
Wine to which alcohol has
been added, generally to increase
the concentration to a high
enough level to prevent fermentation.
Foxy
A tasting term for the musty
odor and flavor of wines made
from Vitis labrusca grapes
native to North America.
Free run
Juice obtained from grapes
that have not been pressed.
Frizzante
See "crackling".
Fruit
The main component of the
wine, usually grape but other
fruits are also used to make
wine, such as pear, plum,
etc. Often mentioned when
the fruit isn't grown in the
same site as the winery, such
as "the wine is produced
here on-site, but the fruit
is purchased from a vineyard
upstate."
Fruit wine
A fermented alcoholic beverage
made from non-grape fruit
juice which may or may not
include the addition of sugar
or honey. Fruit wines are
always called "something"
wines (e.g., plum wine), since
the word wine alone is often
legally defined as a beverage
made only from grapes.
G
Gewürztraminer
Gewürztraminer is a white
wine grape variety from the
wine producing region of Alsace
in France.
Globalization of wine
Refers to the increasingly
international nature of the
wine industry, including vineyard
management practices, winemaking
techniques, wine styles, and
wine marketing.
Grape juice
The free-run or pressed juice
from grapes. Unfermented grape
juice is known as "must."
Grenache
A red wine grape of the Rhone
Valley of France, and elsewhere
(especially Spain). In the
southern Rhone, Grenache replaces
Syrah as the most important
grape (Syrah being more important
in the north).
Green harvest
The harvesting of green (unripe)
grapes in an attempt to increase
the yield of quality grapes.
H
Hard
A tasting term for a wine
that containins too much tannin
and is therefore unpleasant.
Hard wines often take a long
time to mature.
Hectare
A metric measure that equals
10,000 m² (2.471 acres).
Hock
Term for Rhine wines, usually
used in England.
Hogshead
A wine barrel that holds approximately
239 litres (63 gallons).
I
Ice
wine
Wine made from frozen grapes.
Called eiswein in German.
IGT
Abbreviation for "Indicazione
Geografica Tipica", the
lowest-ranking of the three
categories of Italian wine
regulated by Italian law.
J
Jeroboam
A large bottle holding three
litres, the equivalent of
four regular wine bottles.
Jug wine
American term for inexpensive
table wine.
K
Kosher
wine
Wine that is produced under
the supervision of a rabbi
so as to be ritually pure
or clean. Although commonly
sweet, it need not be so.
L
Late
harvest wine
Also known as late picked,
wine made from grapes that
have been left on the vine
longer than usual. Usually
an indicator for a very sweet
or dessert wine.
Lees
Wine sediment that occurs
during and after fermentation,
and consists of dead yeast,
grape seeds, and other solids.
Wine is separated from the
lees by racking.
Legs
The tracks of liquid that
cling to the sides of a glass
after the contents have been
swirled. Often said to be
related to the alcohol or
glycerol content of a wine.
Also called tears.
Lightstruck
A tasting term for a wine
that has had long exposure
to Ultraviolet light causing
"wet cardboard"
type aroma and flavour.
Litre (US - Liter)
A metric measure of volume
equal to 33.8 fluid ounces
(U.S.) or 35.2 fl oz (imperial).
Look
A tasting term for the casual
sensory evaluation of a wine.
M
Maceration
The contact of grape skins
with the must during fermentation,
extracting phenolic compounds
including tannins, anthocyanins,
and aroma.
Madeirized
A wine showing Madeira-like
flavour, generally evidence
of oxidation. Sometimes used
to describe white wine that
has been kept long past its
prime.
Magnum
A bottle holding 1.5 litres,
the equivalent of two regular
wine bottles.
Malolactic fermentation
Also known as malo or MLF,
a secondary fermentation in
wines by lactic acid bacteria
during which tart tasting
malic acid is converted to
softer tasting lactic acid.
Marc
French for "fruit skins".
See "pomace".
Master of Wine
A qualification (not an academic
degree) conferred by The Institute
of Masters of Wine, which
is located in the United Kingdom.
May wine
A light German wine flavored
with sweet woodruff in addition
to strawberries or other fruit.
Merlot
Merlot is a variety of wine
grape used to create a popular
red wine.
Mis en bouteille au
château
French for "bottled at
the winery", usually
in Bordeaux.
Mead
A wine-like alcoholic beverage
made of fermented honey and
water rather than grape juice.
Méthode Champenoise
Process whereby sparkling
wines receive a second fermentation
in the same bottle that will
be sold to a retail buyer.
Compare with Charmat or bulk
fermented.
Methuselah
A large bottle holding six
litres, the equivalent of
eight regular wine bottles.
Microoxygenation
The controlled exposure of
wine to small amounts of oxygen
in the attempt to reduce the
length of time required for
maturation.
Midpalate
A tasting term for the feel
and taste of a wine when held
in the mouth.
Millerandage
A French term referring to
a viticultural problem in
which grape bunches contain
berries of greatly differing
size and levels of maturity.
Caused by cool weather during
flowering.
Mud
See "Lees".
Mulled wine
Wine that is spiced, heated,
and served as a punch.
Must
Unfermented grape juice, including
pips, skins and stalks.
Must weight
The level of fermentable sugars
in the must and the resultant
alcohol content if all the
sugar was converted to ethanol.
N
Nebuchadnezzar
A large bottle holding 15
litres, the equivalent of
20 regular wine bottles.
Négociant
French for "trader".
A wine merchant who assembles
the produce of smaller growers
and winemakers and sells the
result under its own name.
New World wine
Wines produced outside of
the traditional wine growing
areas of Europe and North
Africa.
Noble rot
Another name for the Botrytis
cinerea mould that can pierce
grape skins causing dehydration.
The resulting grapes produce
a highly prized sweet wine,
generally dessert wine.
Nose
A tasting term for the aroma
or bouquet of a wine.
O
Oak
chips
Small pieces of oak wood used
in place of oak barrels in
fermenting and/or ageing wine.
Oenology
The science of wine and winemaking.
Oenophile
A wine aficionado or connoisseur.
Off-dry
A wine that has the barest
hint of sweetness; a slightly
sweet wine in which the residual
sugar is barely perceptible.
Old vine
Wine produced from vines that
are notably old.
Old World wine
Wines produced inside of the
traditional wine growing areas
of Europe and North Africa.
P
Palate
A tasting term for the feel
and taste of a wine in the
mouth.
pH
An acronym for "potential
hydrogen" a measure of
acidity. The lower the pH,
the higher the acidity.However
pH is actually a shorthand
for its mathematical approximation:
in chemistry a small p is
used in place of writing -
log10 and the H here represents
[H+], the concentration of
hydrogen ions.
Phylloxera
A microscopic underground
insect that kills grape vines
by attacking their roots.
Pip
Grape seeds.
Pipe
A cask holding two hogsheads
or 126 U.S. gallons of wine.
Plan Bordeaux
A proposal for enhancing the
economic status of the wine
industry in Bordeaux.
Plonk
British English slang for
an inexpensive bottle of wine.
The term is thought to originate
from the French word for white
wine, "blanc".
Pomace
The skins, stalks, and seeds
that remain after making wine.
Also called marc.
Port
A sweet fortified wine, which
is produced from grapes grown
and processed in the Douro
region of Portugal. This wine
is fortified with the addition
of distilled grape spirits
in order to boost the alcohol
content and stop fermentation
thus preserving some of the
natural grape sugars. Several
imitations are made throughout
the world.
Porto
The legal name for a true
Port wines sold in the United
States since imitation ports
may be labeled as a "port"
there .
Potassium sorbate
A wine stabilizer and preservative.
Proof
Refers to the alcohol content
of a beverage. In the United
States, proof represents twice
the alcohol content as a percentage
of volume. Thus, a 100 proof
beverage is 50% alcohol by
volume and a 150 proof beverage
is 75% alcohol. In the Imperial
system, proof, (or 100% proof),
equals 57.06% ethanol by volume,
or 48.24% by weight. Absolute
or pure ethanol is 75.25 over
proof, or 175.25 proof.
Puncheon
A wine barrel that holds approximately
84 U.S. gallons (318 litres)
.
Punt
The indentation found in the
base of a wine bottle. Punt
depth is often thought to
be related to wine quality,
with better quality wines
having a deeper punt.
Q
Qualitätswein
A designation of better quality
German wines.
Qualitätswein
bestimmter Anbaugebiete
A designation of better quality
German wines from recognized
viticultural areas.
Qualitätswein
mit Pradikat
A designation of best quality
German wines that must conform
to specific requirements of
origin and composition.
R
Racking
The process of drawing wine
off the sediment, such as
lees, after fermentation and
moving it into another vessel.
Rehoboam
A large bottle holding 4.5
litres, the equivalent of
six regular wine bottles.
Rémuage
See "riddling".
Reserva
Spanish and Portuguese term
for a reserve wine.
Reserve
A term given to wine to indicate
that it is of higher quality
than usual.
Residual sugar
Also known as RS, the level
of sugar that remains unfermented
in a wine. See also sweetness
of wine.
Reverse osmosis
A process used to remove excess
alcohol from wine made from
intentionally overripe grapes.
Riddling
Also known as "Rémuage"
in French, part of the Méthode
Champenoise process whereby
bottles of sparkling wine
are successively turned and
gradually tilted upside down
so that sediment settles into
the necks of the bottles in
preparation for degorgement.
Part of the Méthode
Champenoise process.
Riesling
Also known as White Riesling
in countries outside of Germany.
Riesling is a variety of grape
used to make white wine. It
is grown mainly in Germany,
where the relatively cold
climate enables it to produce
grapes for some of the best
white wines in the world.
Riesling, however, is used
for high quality wines also
in Austria and can be found
in countries like Australia,
South Africa and Canada as
well. Riesling is famous for
its vivid acidity and fruitiness
both in the nose and on the
palate.
Rosé wines
Pink wines that are produced
from the shortened contact
of red wine juice with its
skins, reducing the red colour
of the wine. These wines can
also be made by blending a
small amount of red wine with
white wine.
Ruby
A style of Port wine that
is generally sweet.
S
Sack
An early English term for
what is now called Sherry.
Salmanazar
A large bottle holding nine
litres, the equivalent of
12 regular wine bottles.
Sangria
A tart punch made from red
wine along with orange, lemon
and apricot juice with added
sugar.
Screwcap
An alternative to cork for
sealing wine bottles, comprising
a metal cap that screws onto
threads on the neck of a bottle.
Also called a "Stelvin".
Sec
French for dry, except in
the case of Champagne, where
it means sweet.
Sekt
German sparkling wine.
Semi-generic
Wines made in the United States
but named after places that
the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax
and Trade Bureau requires
be modified by a US name of
geographic origin. Examples
would be New York Chablis,
Napa Valley Burgundy or California
Champagne.
Sherry
A fortified wine that has
been subjected to controlled
oxidation to produce a distinctive
flavor.
Shiraz
Shiraz or Syrah is a variety
of grape used to make red
wine.
Solera system
A process used to systematically
blend various vintages of
Sherry.
Sommelier
A trained wine expert that
often works in fine restaurants.
Sparkling wine
Effervescent wine containing
significant levels of carbon
dioxide.
Spätlese
German for "late harvest".
Split
A wine bottle that holds approximately
6 oz (175-187 mL) or one-fourth
the equivalent of a typical
750 mL bottle; a single-serving.
Spumante
Italian for "sparkling".
Generally any sparkling wine
from Italy, although producers
of Franciacorta (wine) have
recently started stating that
Franciacorta is not a "spumante".
Stelvin
A brand of screwcap.
Still wine
Wine that is not sparkling
wine.
Stoving wine
A production method of artificially
mellowing wine by exposing
it to heat.
Sulfites
Compounds (typically: potassium
metabisulfite or sodium metabisulfite)
which are added to wine to
prevent oxidation and microbial
spoilage.
Sulphur dioxide
A substance used in winemaking
as a preservative.
Syndicat des Vins
de Bordeaux et Bordeaux Superieur
An organisation representing
the economic interests of
wine producers in Bordeaux.
Sweetness of wine
Defined by the level of residual
sugar in the final liquid
after the fermentation has
ceased. However, how sweet
the wine will actually taste
is also controlled by factors
such as the acidity and alcohol
levels, the amount of tannin
present, and whether the wine
is sparkling.
T
T
budding
A technique that permits grafting
of different grape varieties
onto existing rootstocks in
a vineyard.
T.B.A.
An abbreviation for the German
wine Trockenbeerenauslese.
Table wine
Generally any wine that is
not sparkling or fortified.
In the US these wines must
also be between 7% and 14%
alcohol by volume.
Tannin
Polyphenolic compounds that
give wine a bitter, dry, or
puckery feeling in the mouth.
Tart
A tasting term describing
a wine high in acidity. Often
displayed by young, unripe
wines.
Tartaric acid
The most important acid found
in grapes.
Tasting flight
Refers to a selection of wines,
usually between three and
eight glasses, but sometimes
as many as fifty, presented
for the purpose of sampling
and comparison.
Tears
See "legs".
Terroir
French for "soil",
the physical and geographical
characteristics of a particular
vineyard site that give the
resultant wine its unique
properties.
Texture
A tasting term for the mouthfeel
of wine on the palate.
Thief
A tubular instrument for removing
a sample from a cask or barrel.
Also called a pipe.
Toast
The charcoal that is burned
into the inside of wine casks.
To toast refers to that process.
It also refers to the practice
of drinking an alcohol beverage
along with wishing good health
or other good fortune.
Trocken
German for "dry".
Trockenbeerenauslese
German for "dry berry
selected". A type of
German wine made from vine-dried
grapes. Such grapes can be
so rare that it can take a
skilled picker a day to gather
enough for just one bottle.[citation
needed]
Tun
A wine cask that holds approximately,
two butts, or 252 U.S. gallons.
Typicity
A wine tasting term used to
describe how much a wine expresses
the typical characteristics
of the varietal.
U
Ullage
Also known as headspace, the
unfilled space in a wine bottle,
barrel, or tank.
Unoaked
Also known as unwooded, refers
to wines that have been matured
without contact with wood/oak
such as in aging barrels.
V
Varietal
Wines made from a single grape
variety.
Vermouth
A fortified wine that has
been flavoured with as many
as 40 herbs and spices.
Vertical and horizontal
wine tasting
In a vertical tasting, different
vintages of the same wine
type from the same winery
are tasted. This emphasizes
differences between various
vintages. In a horizontal
tasting, the wines are all
from the same vintage but
are from different wineries.
Keeping wine variety or type
and wine region the same helps
emphasize differences in winery
styles.
Vigneron
French for vine grower.
Vin
French for wine.
Viña
Spanish for vineyard.
Vine
A plant on which grapes grow.
Vinegar
A sour-tasting, highly acidic,
liquid made from the oxidation
of ethanol in wine, cider,
beer, fermented fruit juice,
or nearly any other liquid
containing alcohol.
Vineyard
A place where grape vines
are grown for wine making
purposes.
Vinho
Portuguese for wine.
Vinho verde
An effervescent white wine
produced in Portugal.
Viniculture
The art and science of making
wine. Also called enology
(or oenology). Not to be confused
with viticulture.
Vinification
The process of making grape
juice into wine.
Vino
Italian and Spanish, Originally
derived from Latin, for wine.
Vintage
The year in which a particular
wine's grapes were harvested.
When a vintage year is indicated
on a label, it signifies that
all the grapes used to make
the wine in the bottle were
harvested in that year.
Viticulture
The cultivation of grapes.
Not to be confused with viniculture.
Vitis labrusca
A breed of grapes native to
North America. See also Foxy.
Vitis vinifera
A breed of grapes native to
Europe.
W
Waiter's friend
A popular type of corkscrew
used commonly in the hospitality
industry.
Wine
An alcoholic beverage made
from the fermentation of
unmodified grape juice.
Winery
A building, property, or
company that is involved
in the production of wine.
Winemaker
A person engaged in the
occupation of making wine.
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