Wine Tasting Party — Types of Tastings, How Much Wine to Buy, Home Set Up and Scoring the Wine
Author: Admin // Category: Wine
Many of us have been to wine tastings at a winery or a local liquor store but have you ever hosted a wine tasting party at home?
It really is quite easy. First you need to decide what kind of wine party you are going to host.
Types of Wine Tasting Parties
Vertical — A tasting with an assortment of the same wine, from the same producer and vineyard, across several vintages (the year the grapes were harvested). An example is to taste Chardonnays from 2001, 2003 and 2006 all from the same vineyard.
Horizontal — Tasting various wines from the same vintage and ideally, wines from the same region and general style. The purpose of tasting one vintage is mainly to compare the different producers and vineyards. For example, Napa Valley red wines from 2001.
Blind — This is where you hide the identities of the wine by either wrapping them or putting them in paper bags. The bottles are numbered and scored without the tasters having the benefit of label, price, producer or anything else.
Guest Choice — This is the easiest wine tasting party to coordinate. Simply tell your guests to bring whatever kind of wine they choose. If you want to narrow them down a bit, be specific in your invitations, like “Bring a bottle of your favorite red wine, $20 limit” or “Bring your favorite bottle of Chardonnay, $15 limit.”
Obviously, you can combine some of these. How about hosting a Blind-Horizontal wine tasting party?
Setting Up Your Home
If you have the room set up 3 wine tasting stations; one for red wine, one for white and a third for the dessert wines. At each wine tasting station, have on hand:
A corkscrew
Measured pourers (serves exactly 1 oz. each time) Bottled water for rinsing mouths and glasses between tastes
A container for rinse water
Crackers for cleansing the palette between tastes
For the white and dessert wine stations, an ice bucket to keep the wine chilled
If you have separate wine tasting stations, you can increase the number of guests that you invite because everyone can spread out and start at different stations as opposed to everyone crowding around a single station. Either way, limit the number of guests to no more than 15 people. You want to easily be able to discuss the wines and having more people makes conversation difficult.
How Much Wine to Buy
If you are providing the wine yourself, keep in mind that a regular sized bottle of wine holds 750 milliliters or 25.4 ounces.
Using the Flip Top Measured Pourers, ensures that every guest receives an exact 1 ounce measure every time you pour. For $16.95, you get 3 of these nifty little gadgets and because they have a flip top, you can also store your wine with these
If you have 12 guests and use the pourers, you will only use half of each bottle (about 12 ounces) during the tasting process, leaving the rest to enjoy after tasting is over. Make sure you buy additional bottles of various wine to serve before and after the tasting.
Scoring the Wine
How wine savvy your guests are will determine if you score the wines during the tasting and if so, how you go about scoring them. Keeping things casual is usually your best bet because after all, it is a party. Typically, people do not want to be bothered with a complicated scoring process.
A good way to keep it easy is to give your guests a simple scorecard which lists the names of the wines. Ask them to force rank the wines in each category. For example, in the white category there are 5 wines to taste. Each person will score those 5 wines; 1 being their favorite and 5 being their least favorite.
At the end of the wine tasting, collect the scorecards and determine which wines are the party favorites in the wine category (reds, whites, desserts).
Lastly, to keep things simple, offer your guests meat, cheese, fruit and nut platters that complement your wine choices. This is a very important step in hosting a wine tasting party. You do not want your food choices to conflict with the wines you have chosen.
Hosting a wine tasting party at home is fun especially if you take the time to pick out some quality wines and pair those wines with good food. Your guests will appreciate the special care given when planning this type of party.
Watch the video related to wine
Killer color video of Mike Bloomfield in his heyday and his gorgeous Les Paul!!
Help answer the question about wine
What kind of red wine is used for the snack having during the communion?Do they have to buy special wine made by priests in a winery, or can they go to the beer and liquor store and pick up a bottle?
About Author
Sandee Lembke from Theme Party Queen.com invites you to visit her site for a Free Wine Tasting Scorecard that you can download and a Free Wine-Cheese Pairings Table to help you select complementary food.
Tags: and, Host A Wine Tasting, iron, Tasting Party, Wine, Wine Parties, Wine Tasting At Home, Wine Tasting Parties, Wine Tasting Party
July 3rd, 2009 at 7:16 am
Les Pauls are great,and so is Bloomfield- but let’s not forget all the great FENDER players on Strats & Teles !!! Fenders RULE in Blues.
July 3rd, 2009 at 7:36 am
July 3rd, 2009 at 7:54 am
Oh my look how young Nick Gravenities is!
July 3rd, 2009 at 8:02 am
Yeah . . . .
So you’re just into pissing money away and you have none left to hire true winemakers and grape growers, so you turned to Yahoo Answers to get your 3 paragraph crash course?? In that case, I just cloned a dinosaur in my kitchen . . . . Woo Hoo!
What happened to your Cambridge acceptance to get a law degree and your other promising future as a doctor???
I call B.S. on this one!
July 3rd, 2009 at 10:19 am
To make wine at home, these are my favorite resources:
http://winemaking.jackkeller.net/
http://www.homewinemaking.co.uk/
For virtually any fruit wine, the fruit is crushed in a press to extract the juice. Depending on the style, the pulp and seeds will be left in the must to ferment with the juice. For others, it will be strained out.
I just finished a batch of pomegranate wine (where the seeds pretty much ARE the juice) where I crushed all the pomegranates myself. It's quite a bit of work without the proper press.
July 3rd, 2009 at 11:20 am
Where can i get mp3 of that ?
July 3rd, 2009 at 6:51 pm
Special wine with a very high alcohol content, supposedly…so it kills the germs of the person who drank before you…eeew.
Until it is consecrated that is, then it becomes the blood of Christ and is no longer wine.
July 3rd, 2009 at 11:27 pm
yes, the cooking wine next to vinegar is ok
July 4th, 2009 at 7:44 am
this is from the 3 DVD set of Monterey Pop. Its on the 3rd disc which they call the “outtakes.” HA! That disc has all the best stuff.
July 4th, 2009 at 8:59 am
First you must find a type of red wine you enjoy drinking. There are so many varietials out there. What kinds of foods do you enjoy?
For Steak, you may want a merlot or cabernet
For Lamb, you may want a cebernet or zinfandel
For BBQ, you may want a zinfandel
For grilled chicken and/or pork perhaps a pinot
There's no right or wrong choice, wine is about preference.
There are a couple great wines out in the market place which are under $40 and have had great reviews and are good to drink now or celler for while. 2003 Whitehall Lane Cabernet has had several great reviews. But there are also sooo many others. Hartford Court also has some wonderful Zinfandels and Pinot's.
Wine tasting a big thing now… you may want to check out a site called localwineevents.com to see if there is a wine tasting event in your area to gather the information you need to make an informed selection.
July 4th, 2009 at 10:38 am
July 4th, 2009 at 1:34 pm
If drinking wine you plan 1 bottle for 4 and 1/2 servings – however a tasting is far less about 1 oz per taster (about 30ml) which is approximately 25 tastings per bottle (750ml). I do recommend purchasing a few extra bottles to sell (just double your purchase price) or making a deal with a local wine seller to give you a commission for referring people to them for additional bottles. Have a card handy with the sellers name, address and a list of the wines they are tasting as well as a 1-5 score for the taster to keep so they remember the wines they preferred. Don't forget to have a selection of cheeses and crackers as well as some grapes and lots of water for cleansing the pallet (i recommend having a large vessel with cucumber slices in it for a full cleanse of the wine sugars) – then pour it into smaller pitchers as you go. Hope this helps!
July 4th, 2009 at 9:10 pm
I just read a great book on him, i suggest any of his fans read it. Its called “If you love these blues”Tells what a beautiful person and what an incredible musician he was, That les paul is magic
July 4th, 2009 at 10:39 pm
killer technique.. amazing mike
July 5th, 2009 at 12:57 am
Mike Bloomfield — another great bluesman gone too soon. Plays the hell out of that Les Paul!
July 5th, 2009 at 7:48 am
Pick up a nice cheap sauvignon blanc. It's crisp and light. Unlike chardonnay which is too oaky and buttery for me now. Not unless you want your chicken dish to taste like you dipped it in a vat of butter! Hee. Other good light choices are pinot gris or pinot grigio.
July 6th, 2009 at 12:34 am
This is on a cd released called Electric Flag Greatest Hits, i think? I got it for my pop,cuz i took his A Long Time Comin cd along time ago. Pop is 60 im 35 and been listening to this since i was 14…the whole group is ridiculoulsy talented,a must have
July 6th, 2009 at 8:01 am
A really impressive thing about Mike Bloomfield was his rhythm guitar playing is every bit as strong as his solo work. If Mike never took a solo he would still be a blues monster. And his solos are melodic not just a bunch of “blues riffs”