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  PREPARATION
  THE EYE
  THE NOSE
  THE MOUTH




 
 
First contact
The taster sips a small quantity of wine, lets it cover his palette before spitting it out.
This taste is a means to get two complementary senses in motion : taste and smell.
It enables the taster to confirm or refute the perceptions felt during the visual and olfactory examinations.
It is also essential to judge the quality of a wine : if it is great or remarkable, it will be long to taste, to the extent that the taste remains long after the first sip. If balanced it will provide present, harmonious and complementary sensations.

Flavours
The texture is felt by the taste buds. Each area of the tongue is specialised in a different type of taste.
Even if perception varies from one individual to another a broad sketch of the tongue’s taste buds can be drawn. The tip of the tongue is sensitive to sugar. The outer sides for the salty. Acidic tastes can be felt along these sides, but also on the internal side of the tongue. Finally bitter tastes are felt on the back of the tongue.
Each of these four main types of flavours give the individual a particular level of perception, one that evolves with age. Tasting exercises can outline and develop these levels of perception.

The nose
Retro-olfaction or finish enriches one’s perception of the four main flavours. The nose communicates with the pharynx through the back of the throat. By giving the impression that he or she is « chewing the wine » during tasting, the taster breathes in a certain quantity of air and thus encourages the rise of the vapours to the nasal cells that will identify the scent.
This stage is known as retro-olfaction or the finish and enables the taster to appreciate
the richness of the flavours in the mouth, mixing taste and olfactory impressions.

Touch

The sense of touch, through the tongue and also the mucus layers that cover the inside
of the mouth also play an important role in tasting. Astringency, the grating taste
of the tannins, the burning sensation from the alcohol, the sharpness of possible gas residue, fluidity, consistence, texture and relief are all parameters that must be taken
into account.
Finally, the length of a wine in the mouth is often a revelatory indicator of its quality
and age.

An art to be cultivated
While anyone can, from the first taste, appreciate the most obvious of these parameters,
it goes without saying that only repeated practice gives the exercise its full meaning.
Finally, while wine-tasting can be considered an « exercise de style », it also provides some fantastic taste combinations: that of wines with certain foods, perfect, traditional
or unexpected matches. In this case, the only limit to the imagination is pleasure itself. The pleasure of a successful meal, eaten in good company… a certain « art de vivre ».


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