FREE online courses on Learn to Taste Wine - Taste - More Than Just
Swallowing
"Taste" doesn't mean only what we sense with our mouths.
Scientists tell us that our taste buds can discern only
four basic flavors: Sweet, sour, bitter and salty. What we think of as taste,
however, is a much more complex sensory experience that combines what our taste
buds tell us with the senses of smell and touch.
The feel of the wine in your mouth, its sense of lightness or
weight, a quality that may range from watery-thin to viscous and oily is very
much a part of the experience of tasting wine. Sourness is a fault in wine if it
reeks of vinegar, the sign of a spoiled beverage. In the form of crisp, sharp
acidity, however, a sour sensation is a desirable trait, offering a brisk,
acidic taste that's as amiable a companion to fish as a squirt of fresh lemon. A
wine with too little acid, on the other hand, may seem mellow at first, but it's
bland and uninspiring, lacking the verve to stand up to food.
Sour and sweet tastes are mixed in many California
Chardonnays, which at their best are crisp, almost dry, with just enough
fresh-fruit sweetness to soften the cutting acidic edge.
Finally, sweet dominates the sour in "late harvest" and other
dessert- type wines, in which a penetrating sweetness identifies the style, but
the sugar is balanced against sharp acid that keeps the wine from cloying.