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CMS Introduction Wine Tasting Method

The document provides an introduction to the CMS Tasting Method, which is a systematic approach for evaluating wine using sight, nose, and palate. It discusses in detail how to evaluate various aspects of a wine using each of the senses. Key areas covered for sight include clarity, color, sediment, and gas evidence. For nose, it describes how to identify clean vs flawed aromas and provides a framework for describing fruit, earthy, floral, and other aromas. The palate section focuses on analyzing flavors, structure, balance, length/finish, complexity, and suitable food pairings. The overall document serves as a guide for developing the vocabulary and process to rigorously evaluate wines.
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© © All Rights Reserved
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
167 views48 pages

CMS Introduction Wine Tasting Method

The document provides an introduction to the CMS Tasting Method, which is a systematic approach for evaluating wine using sight, nose, and palate. It discusses in detail how to evaluate various aspects of a wine using each of the senses. Key areas covered for sight include clarity, color, sediment, and gas evidence. For nose, it describes how to identify clean vs flawed aromas and provides a framework for describing fruit, earthy, floral, and other aromas. The palate section focuses on analyzing flavors, structure, balance, length/finish, complexity, and suitable food pairings. The overall document serves as a guide for developing the vocabulary and process to rigorously evaluate wines.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 48

INTRODUCTORY

SOMMELIER
COURSE AND EXAM
CMS TASTING METHOD

THE IMPORTANCE OF HAVING EVALUATIVE METHODOLOGY

 Taste with purpose

 Improve your palate and ability to taste

 Develop your aroma/taste/flavor memory

 Improve your ability to describe and sell wine

 Form valuable references to classic wines of the world


HOW WE WILL
APPROACH THIS

• We will teach you the


language and format used to
describe wine

• You will often hear this


systematic approach called
“The Grid”
THE GRID
Tasting
Evaluation
Format
PRO TIP!
AREAS OF EVALUATIVE TASTING

SIGHT
PALATE

NOSE

I N T RO D U C T O RY C O U R S E |8
SIGHT

I N T RO D U C T O RY C O U R S E |9
KEYS TO
EVALUATING SIGHT

 Tilt the glass away from you at


45º
 White background
 Evaluate in the best light possible
(daylight)
 Hold the glass by the stem
 Clean, well-polished glass

10
SIGHT

Clarity
 Turbidity- the amount of solids in the wine
 Winemaking technique
 Filtered vs. unfiltered wine
 Age
• Aged wines can precipitate sediment
• Youthful, highly extracted wine may also contain sediment

Clarity Scale: Clear / Hazy / Turbid

I N T RO D U C T O RY C O U R S E |1 1
SIGHT
Sediment & Particles
White Wines
 Visible tartrates
 Seen as crystals
 Often removed before bottling
• Filtration
• Cold stabilization
 Mention if there

I N T RO D U C T O RY C O U R S E |1 2
SIGHT
Sediment & Particles
Red Wines
 Color pigment and tannin
precipitate as red wine ages

 Sediment is also found in


young unfiltered red wine

 Mention if there

I N T RO D U C T O RY C O U R S E |1 3
SIGHT
Concentration of Color
 Intensity or depth of color
 Gives clues to a wine’s…
• Age
• Storage conditions
• Possibly grape variety
Concentration of Color Scale
• Pale / Medium / Deep

I N T RO D U C T O RY C O U R S E |1 4
SIGHT
Concentration of Color
 White Wines
• Age (youthful or aged)
• Barrel use
• Botrytis
• Grape variety pigment
• Other exposure to oxygen

15
SIGHT
Concentration of Color
 Red Wines
• Grape variety
• Color extraction
• Age

16
SIGHT
Colors of White Wine

STRAW YELLOW GOLD

I N T RO D U C T O RY C O U R S E |1 7
SIGHT
Colors of Red Wine

PURPLE RUBY/RED GARNET

I N T RO D U C T O RY C O U R S E |1 8
SIGHT
Secondary Colors & Hues

WHITE WINE RED WINE


 Silver  Ruby
 Green  Garnet
 Copper  Orange
 Gold  Brown
 Blue

I N T RO D U C T O RY C O U R S E |1 9
SIGHT
Rim Variation
 Phenomenon of age
 Color difference between core and
rim
 The older the wine, the more rim
variation
SIGHT
Color Extract & Staining
 For Red Wines
 Intense extraction of color
(vinification)
 Warm climates
 Highly pigmented grape varieties
 Scale:
None / Light / Medium / Heavy
SIGHT
Tearing
 Created by:
• Alcohol
• Residual sugar
 Shape & cleanliness of glass
 Thin vs thick tears
 Staining or coloration
 Scale:
Light / Medium / Heavy
SIGHT
Gas Evidence
 Usually in young wines that are
bottled soon after fermentation
 CO2 from fermentation trapped in
bottle
 Often seen in cool climate white
wines
 Screw cap closures
 Mention only it if its there
NOSE

I N T RO D U C T O RY C O U R S E |2 4
NOSE

 The most important aspect of


tasting
 Human sense of smell vs
sense of taste vs flavor
 Aroma accounts for 85% of
flavor
 Swirl the glass

I N T RO D U C T O RY C O U R S E |2 5
NOSE
Clean vs. Flawed
First things first! Is the wine clean?
Be aware of the following wine flaws
• TCA / Corkiness
• Oxidation
• Volatile Acidity - VA
• Ethyl Acetate - EA
• Excess Sulfur Dioxide - SO2
• Brettanomyces
• Hydrogen Sulfide (H2S)

I N T RO D U C T O RY C O U R S E |2 6
NOSE
Intensity of Aroma

Scale:
 Low (delicate)
 Moderate
 High (powerful)

I N T RO D U C T O RY C O U R S E |2 7
NOSE
Age Assessment
Scale:
 Youthful
• Young, bright, primary fresh fruit aromas

 Developing
• Beginning to show signs of age

 Vinous
• Signs of age and oxidation

I N T RO D U C T O RY C O U R S E |2 8
NOSE
Describing Aroma - Fruit
WHITE WINES
 Apple/Pear: Green, red, or yellow apples, pears

 Citrus: Lemon, lime, orange, grapefruit, tangerine

 Stone/Pitted Fruit: Peach, nectarine, apricot

 Tropical Fruit: Pineapple, mango, papaya, passion fruit

 Melon: Cantaloupe, honeydew

I N T RO D U C T O RY C O U R S E |2 9
NOSE
Describing Aroma - Fruit
RED WINES
 Red Fruits: Cherry, raspberry, red plum, cranberry, strawberry pomegranate

 Black Fruits: Blackberry, black cherry, black plum, blackcurrant

 Blue Fruits: Blueberry, boysenberry

I N T RO D U C T O RY C O U R S E |3 0
NOSE
Consider the Condition of the Fruit
Is the fruit……
 Ripe
 Fresh
 Tart
 Baked
 Cooked / Stewed
 Dried
 Desiccated
 Bruised
 Preserved / Jam
NOSE
Consider the Condition of the Fruit… EVEN MORE!
NOSE
Describing Aroma - Nonfruit
 Flowers  Butter
 Spices  Honey
 Herbs  Leather
 Vegetal  Tobacco
 Animal  And much
 Fermentation more!
 Petrol

I N T RO D U C T O RY C O U R S E |3 3
NOSE
Describing Aroma - Earth

 Forest floor
 Compost
 Mushrooms / truffle
 Potting soil
 Fresh-turned earth

I N T RO D U C T O RY C O U R S E |3 4
NOSE
Describing Aroma - Mineral
 Wet Stone
 Limestone
 Chalk
 Slate
 Flint

I N T RO D U C T O RY C O U R S E |3 5
NOSE
Describing Aroma - Oak
Aromas & flavors indicating oak use
 Baking Spices
 Vanilla
 Dill
 Coconut

I N T RO D U C T O RY C O U R S E |3 6
NOSE
Describing Aroma - Oak
 Certain aromas can give an indication of
the type & size of barrel used
 Describing Oak / Scale
• None
• Large barrels vs. small barrique
• Old oak vs. new oak
• French vs. American oak

I N T RO D U C T O RY C O U R S E |3 7
PALATE

I N T RO D U C T O RY C O U R S E |3 8
PALATE
 Take a SIP of the wine

 Gargle! Swish!

 Spit!

 Focus on how the flavors


evolve on your palate –
especially the finish
PALATE
Describing Flavor
Using the same descriptors as for the nose, describe each of the following…
• Fruit
• Fruit condition or character
• Non-fruit flavors
• Earth
• Mineral
• Wood (oak indicators)

I N T RO D U C T O RY C O U R S E |4 0
PALATE
Describing Flavor

Anything new that was not there on the nose


or has changed on the palate?

I N T RO D U C T O RY C O U R S E |4 1
PALATE
Structure
Sweetness / Dryness
 The presence of residual sugar in the wine
 Bone Dry / Dry / Off-Dry / Medium Sweet / Sweet /
Lusciously Sweet

I N T RO D U C T O RY C O U R S E |4 2
PALATE
Structure

Phenolic Bitterness (white wine)


 Cause: Specific grape varieties
 Effect: Sensed as bitterness and/or astringency

 Yes or No

I N T RO D U C T O RY C O U R S E |4 3
PALATE
Structure

Tannin (red wine)


• Cause: From grape skins and or oak
• Effect: Sensed as bitterness and/or astringency
• Low / Medium - / Medium / Medium + / High

I N T RO D U C T O RY C O U R S E |4 4
PALATE
Structure
Acidity
• Focus on the salivary glands and the finish
• Low / Medium - / Medium / Medium + / High

Alcohol
• Sensed as heat in the nose, throat and chest
• Low / Medium - / Medium / Medium + / High

I N T RO D U C T O RY C O U R S E |4 5
PALATE
Structure
Body
• Weight of the wine
• Alcohol, glycerin and grape solids
• Light / Medium / Full

Texture
• The feel of the wine on the palate
• Lean / Creamy / Round / Other textures

I N T RO D U C T O RY C O U R S E |4 6
PALATE
Balance
• Does any one element dominate?

Length / Finish
• Length of time wine flavors stay on the palate after swallowing
• Short / Medium - / Medium / Medium + / Long
• Quality of the finish: tart, astringent, silky, bitter

Complexity
• The number of aromas and flavors in the wine
• Low / Medium - / Medium / Medium + / High
OTHER IMPORTANT
ASPECTS TO CONSIDER
• What made this wine
unique?

• Make a list of a few


important markers

• What types of food would


you pair with this wine?
THANK YOU!

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