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#199781 - 07/16/07 04:53 PM
Reassurance for beginners
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Good Friend
Registered: 03/16/06
Posts: 363
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Disappointed in yourself because you could not taste the lychee nuts and gooseberries touted by a critic in his review of the wine you are drinking? Don't be. A very interesting article on taste and tasting in Slate magazine. http://www.slate.com/id/2168762/pagenum/allReaffirms what I have said many times - what I taste is what I taste and has very little to do with what you will taste.
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#202826 - 07/30/07 01:09 AM
Re: Reassurance for beginners
[Re: Brom]
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Regular
Registered: 10/26/04
Posts: 86
Loc: Massachusetts
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Personally, I don't want wine that has hints of leather, coffee, or whatever; I want wine that smells and tastes like wine. If I am drinking a Cabernet Sauvignon, I want it to smell and taste like a Cabernet Sauvignon; and likewise with any other variety.
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#202891 - 07/30/07 09:27 AM
Re: Reassurance for beginners
[Re: PeterLewicke]
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Best Friend
Registered: 11/26/04
Posts: 1011
Loc: St Albans, England
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Personally, I don't want wine that has hints of leather, coffee, or whatever; I want wine that smells and tastes like wine. If I am drinking a Cabernet Sauvignon, I want it to smell and taste like a Cabernet Sauvignon; and likewise with any other variety. In one sentence, the end of all wine criticism and description.  "What does your wine taste like?" "Wine."* But then you say you want Cabernet Sauvignon to taste like Cabernet Sauvignon. But what does Cab Sauv taste like, and how does that taste differ from Merlot? Have you never tasted a wine that has hints of coffee, or blackberry or mint???
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#203665 - 08/02/07 10:09 AM
Re: Reassurance for beginners
[Re: Coco's Mama]
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Best Friend
Registered: 11/26/04
Posts: 1011
Loc: St Albans, England
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Hmm I was hoping it was common or some reason, ya I am not missing anything but it is an odd reaction , i wish i could taste what other people tasted, al my friends drink wine. Buying it is the trickiest lol. No, your reaction is not common -- as you say, all your friends drink wine, as have people since the beginning of history. Of course, not everyone drinks wine. Many people do not imbibe and that maybe because they toodon't like the taste or react to it like you do. But people who don'thave aninterest in wine don't often take part in wine discussion boards. To have such a reaction after just two sips is very unusual. Not to appreciate the smell is not -- since that is an acquired taste. If you really want to persist (and you may ask yourself - why bother)next time have just one sip and stop there. Get used to one sip then go to two and build up tolerance.
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#203670 - 08/02/07 11:27 AM
Re: Reassurance for beginners
[Re: Peter May]
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True Blue Soulmate
Registered: 12/16/04
Posts: 18872
Loc: UK Midlands
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Well, as that article says: 'We know .. that the vast majority of flavors that we perceive when eating and drinking are actually aromas, filtered up to our noses through a tube called the retronasal passage. Our taste buds, on the other hand, detect just five basic flavor sensations: sweet, salty, sour, bitter, and savory.' http://www.slate.com/id/2168762/pagenum/allSo perhaps you should just smell the wine , Coco's Mama!
_________________________
"The secret of success is constancy to purpose" - Benjamin Disraeli.
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