Swirling Wine

Can you remember the first time you swirled the wine in your glass? If so can you remember where you learned that quintessential and often cliched action? Unless you grew up as a wine savant in a isolated wine cave in the Douro Valley you didn’t start swirling wine on your own. So why is it done? Should you do it with every wine? Can you over swirl? Let’s take a look.You can type “why do you swirl wine” into any search engine and get a number pretty decent answers. Yet I have not found just one spot that combines and condenses all of them into a single recommendation.So. Should you swirl every wine, every time? No.I am going to address the “How” to swirl your wine first. Do it gently with out spilling it. It’s not a washing machine, slow and gentle, for 6-8 seconds at a time. You CAN over swirl it! There is also an element here on the proper way to hold your glass:  NOT by the cup (the curved bowl section)! If you would like a tutorial please ask me at the next tasting.Whether it’s a wine you just opened at home or at a wine tasting, restaurant, wherever; Smell your wine first without doing anything. Yes, that’s not a typo, smell your wine first. Then taste it.Now, at this point, you can swirl your wine, unless it is a very old wine. Very old wines tend to be very delicate and swirling them can break them down. You don’t have to swirl, it’s up to you, but if you do swirl continue.So you poured wine in your glass. You smelled it, tasted it, swirled it, gently. Now smell and taste it again. Was it better or worse? If it was worse then don’t swirl anymore. If it continues to not taste good POUR IT OUT, it’s probably a bad wine! If it continues to taste better, then give it a gentle swirl each time before you take a drink, smelling often.So why can it get better when we swirl, what’s happening? Oxidation. Just like an aerator, swirling mixes oxygen into the wine, making it easer to smell, which science has proven to be about 75% of what you taste. Smelling wine helps you taste wine.The mixing of oxygen can also begin to break down tannins, making some big wines a little softer and thus more pleasant.Hopefully this gives you a little more guidance on why and when we swirl. Just don’t spill it on yourself or others. Cheers!

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So Gourmet 7 June Tasting

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Aragon’s Blind Tasting 1 June