Wine Basics: The 9 Keywords you must know

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  • Опубликовано: 1 май 2024
  • Wine has a very specific jargon.
    When starting out, it's important to understand the meaning of these 9 words.
    Want to learn about wine? Get our free Wine 101 book: The Essentials Basics of wine.
    Just head over to intovino.com/wine-101-free-book/ to get your book now
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Комментарии • 78

  • @animaux85
    @animaux85 2 месяца назад +1

    Great video. I'm a winemaker and learned a few new things.

  • @nedimnomer1167
    @nedimnomer1167 3 года назад +7

    Very nice and useful analysis, thank you. I think many would also much appreciate if you could make video only on the eye, what we can tell by merely looking at a glass of wine

  • @adminvx
    @adminvx 4 года назад +1

    Your video so informative! THANK YOU

  • @nirex32
    @nirex32 9 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for sharing your great knowledge! So much fun to listen to you!

  • @irineabade7872
    @irineabade7872 2 года назад +1

    Thank you, I enjoyed very informative.

  • @joshn.5625
    @joshn.5625 2 года назад

    Very helpful. Thank you!

  • @NiiroKitsune
    @NiiroKitsune 3 года назад +36

    I agree with several comments here, this video was a fantastic starting place for people just starting to venture out into the world of wine. So many of the videos on here are just uninformative and a waste of time, but these 12 minutes are worth the watch.

  • @guapando
    @guapando 2 года назад

    Thanks for sharing . . . important 🍷

  • @coronarana9738
    @coronarana9738 2 года назад +1

    Great video it was really informative thanks 🙏😊

  • @krantilad6296
    @krantilad6296 2 года назад

    Thank you so much 😊

  • @frazerphiri3469
    @frazerphiri3469 Год назад

    Thanks for the insight

  • @moafrikapartners
    @moafrikapartners 2 года назад

    Thank u. This was insightful

  • @mulukentesfaye4383
    @mulukentesfaye4383 Месяц назад

    You are unique, Thank you so much!

  • @clubch4283
    @clubch4283 5 месяцев назад

    Very useful knowledge. Thank you

  • @bertiestclr
    @bertiestclr 3 года назад +2

    So informative. Thank you so much from the 2nd Napa of USA, Texas Hill Country. What is your most favorite wine & why? Peace from the Big Country of Texas.

  • @louwenjuan8179
    @louwenjuan8179 11 месяцев назад

    very helpful, thank you

  • @rabinshrestha1068
    @rabinshrestha1068 Год назад

    Great Video, worth to watch, Thank you

  • @virginiafeliciano9318
    @virginiafeliciano9318 2 года назад +1

    Awesome video! Wondering why we smell the pepper or the raspberry or green apple etc if nothing is added to wine?

  • @lipstickonmyglass3297
    @lipstickonmyglass3297 3 года назад

    Cool video, these videos are so helpful for people

  • @mr-mario7656
    @mr-mario7656 2 года назад

    thank u for that video

  • @diogenes_of_therapia
    @diogenes_of_therapia 3 года назад +7

    You should include Asia Minor and Persia to the old world. For instance grape variety Syrah is originated from the city and region Shiraz in İran.

  • @carlospascual1873
    @carlospascual1873 4 года назад +1

    Super interesting! Thanks!

    • @Intovino
      @Intovino  4 года назад

      Carlos Pascual thank you!

  • @giuliacatalano3461
    @giuliacatalano3461 4 года назад +1

    Very useful and interesting!

    • @Intovino
      @Intovino  4 года назад

      giulia catalano thanks for the feedback!

  • @saedbatshon1372
    @saedbatshon1372 3 года назад +1

    Thanks mate!

  • @everblu
    @everblu 3 года назад +18

    After watching so many vids on wine for beginners, this is the simplest one and most informative of them all! It is full bodied with information yet very easy on the palate.. lol sorry
    Thank you💙

    • @Intovino
      @Intovino  3 года назад +1

      Hide Me thank you very much for the compliment!! And a great thank you for taking the time to write a feedback!

    • @everblu
      @everblu 3 года назад

      Intovino 🥂

    • @thegamethemovie9605
      @thegamethemovie9605 Год назад

      Yes, especially the illustrations organizing information. Video bookmarked for future reference.

  • @zolemica
    @zolemica 2 года назад

    I tried to order your free ebook on wine, but received a "Page Not Found" message.
    Are you no longer offering this?

  • @khweziinnovations5679
    @khweziinnovations5679 2 года назад

    I am failing to get the ebook on my email. Is it still available?

  • @fabiankrauss7325
    @fabiankrauss7325 3 года назад +1

    Fantastic basic information! This is only my opinion, but it was mentioned here that salt is not a taste you experience in wines. I'm not saying he's wrong, I am simply of the opinion that the statement is an inaccuracy. As someone who has attended many wines tastings over the past 15 years, I have tasted a few where I could tell upon initial tasting that the wine came from a region near the ocean, because I could taste the salt in the wine instantly. I have spoken to wine makers from all over the world and they tell this is an actual thing. Wonder if anyone else has experienced this as well?

    • @Intovino
      @Intovino  3 года назад

      Thanks for your comment! So indeed there can be saline feels in certain wines, but this is more often iodine notes which you find influencing wines from near oceans/ seas.
      These salty impressions can also be the perception of minerality in other wines.

  • @ashamon99
    @ashamon99 2 года назад

    If the fermentation prosseses must include sugar, how is dry farm wine made then??

  • @neerajbhatt940
    @neerajbhatt940 4 года назад +2

    Sir my question is the fruit flavor which we are getting after taste of the wine how it's come? Are they seriously adding the fruit flavor or it's just coming naturally? Thank you!

    • @Intovino
      @Intovino  4 года назад +11

      Hi Neeraj! Thanks for your question. It's a question I get very often indeed... There is no flavour added to wine, just fermented grape juice. The flavours you get are in fact not tastes but smells... This happens when you eat too: you have the impression it's a taste when in fact this is your nose kind of smelling what's on your palate.
      With wine these smells can come either from the grape itself, or from during the fermentation process or they are developed when the wine is ageing.
      They are naturally occurring and do not come from anything that's added to the wine.
      I hope this makes sense?

  • @agagemmagiusto9570
    @agagemmagiusto9570 3 года назад

    love this video!!

  • @joanjakoinao2654
    @joanjakoinao2654 2 года назад +1

    I'm surprised that 'dry wine' has not been mentioned or explained, for a video on the basics of wine.

  • @neerajbhatt940
    @neerajbhatt940 4 года назад +2

    Didn't understand the concept of reserva, can you please explain what does that mean! Thank you!

    • @Intovino
      @Intovino  4 года назад +2

      Hi Neeraj! Thanks for your message! There is quite a bit to say here... Will do a video very shortly!

  • @raisinyao
    @raisinyao 5 лет назад +3

    when to use astringent vs tannic as a description in wine? Thank you.

    • @Intovino
      @Intovino  5 лет назад +5

      Hi Raisin, thanks for your very good question!
      I will give you the easy version of the answer: Astringent is often used to describe a wine that is very tannic, so more than tannic.
      The reality is actually much more complicated, as tannin is a very complex subject and I don't want to bore you with a whole bunch of details.
      So, simply astringent is very tannic :)

    • @raisinyao
      @raisinyao 5 лет назад +1

      Thank you very much, hope you didn't find my question to be an "idiot" hehe, can I follow up a question? I know a very very very very little about tannin, but is it also right that when you say tannic you just don't taste it? you also feel it in your mouth? and does it also have a role when a wine is light, medium or full body? Thank you.

    • @Intovino
      @Intovino  5 лет назад +1

      Raisin Yao it is a very good question! There is no such thing as a stupid question!
      Tannin is a taste; it is the bitter taste that comes from the tannin which is a natural chemical compound that is found in some parts of the grape and the oak barrels.
      So strictly a taste that is detected by your taste buds.

    • @Intovino
      @Intovino  5 лет назад +1

      Regarding the weight, tannin doesn’t really come into it. Weight is base on sweetness, alcohol, texture and flavours.

    • @Intovino
      @Intovino  5 лет назад +1

      Don’t hesitate if you have any other questions; it’s a pleasure to help!

  • @thottijeyajai9420
    @thottijeyajai9420 4 года назад +3

    Very informative

    • @Intovino
      @Intovino  4 года назад

      Thank you! Absolute pleasure!

  • @elanretinam2475
    @elanretinam2475 2 года назад

    Very informative. Thank you

  • @yxpbizgy4150
    @yxpbizgy4150 4 года назад +2

    What does dry mean in wine taste?

    • @ModernLady
      @ModernLady 4 года назад +2

      yxpbizg y That the wine isn’t sweet.

  • @coutovee
    @coutovee 4 года назад +1

    Great great great!

  • @shihabmunshi1216
    @shihabmunshi1216 3 года назад

    what are all keywords in wine making?

    • @Intovino
      @Intovino  3 года назад

      Shihab Munshi that’s going to need to be another video!

  • @missc888
    @missc888 22 дня назад

    1. Grape Variety (type of grape) 2. Origin (where it is from) 3. Vintage (year in which grapes were used/ harvested to make the wine) 4. New World (Modern makers I.e Australia, NZ / Old (where wine comes from historically Europe/ Mediterranean) 5. Eye - 5 senses I.e sound of wine poured, sight looking at wine, smell of wine, taste, touch - eye is the look colours, contrast likely taste of wine, age ability. 6 Nose - smells/ aromas, young or old etc 7. Taste, sweet, sour (acidic, crisp, zingy) or bitter/ tannic only elements applicable to wine…. 8. Flavours - are actually picked up by smell / nose not taste 9. Weight - light, heavy, full, medium, determined by sweetness + alcohol / texture / flavours - light have delicate flavours, watery texture, low sweetness + alcohol … heavy = bold flavours, thick texture, higher alcohol volume + sweetness

  • @user-dl6lu6nc4l
    @user-dl6lu6nc4l Год назад

    Georgia[europe] is where we discover wine right

  • @QuadeAlex
    @QuadeAlex 3 года назад

    Wines can be Salty and Umami

  • @oblive-episode3live616
    @oblive-episode3live616 3 года назад

    Aoc doc docg doesn’t give you the origin of wine it tells you the quality of wine

    • @Intovino
      @Intovino  3 года назад

      It does both...

    • @oblive-episode3live616
      @oblive-episode3live616 3 года назад

      @@Intovino doc is used in Spain docg in Italy and Portugal how would you know

    • @Intovino
      @Intovino  3 года назад

      @@oblive-episode3live616 yes.. if you want to learn have a look at my other videos.
      You’ll learn all you need

  • @berlindespt
    @berlindespt 3 года назад +1

    Bitter=Tannins????? You can't find salty taste in wine?????
    So why does white wines don't have tannins (unless they are oaked) and lot's and lot's of them have a bitter finish? Have you already tasted wines grown near the sea? Don't you find the saltiness?
    Your videos are not bad but if you are trying to teach something its important to do it right and to be accurate!
    Great video on the Malbec however! I liked that.

    • @Intovino
      @Intovino  3 года назад +1

      Hi Nuno,
      Thanks a mil for your comment.
      Just a quick answer on the above..
      Teaching is very different depending on who you are teaching...
      My aim is not to be right or accurate, my aim is to help people understand.
      If I teach calculus to someone never exposed to it, I am not going to teahc them about negatives... I am not going to teach fractions of a whole number, decimals etc...
      I am going to teach them about the fun of playing with numbers.
      Then, when they are having great fun, I can add new principles.
      If I start with everything, then I make it inaccessible.
      Again, there are lots of things I explain to people that are not wholly accurate, and even at times actually wrong..
      But if it helps them learn and have fun, then I feel I have shared my passion.
      By all means people can disagree...
      But (for me) the greatest teachers I had didn't tell me everything in one go, they told me just what I needed to make me curious to want to know more.
      Hope it makes sense!
      Santé Nuno!

    • @berlindespt
      @berlindespt 3 года назад +1

      ​@@Intovino Hi Cyrus, I agree with you that one should approach wine you basic and simple concepts otherwise i can become annoying and demotivating for someone that is just starting. Explaining tannins it's quite often difficult, however they are mainly astringent, they also give a bitter sensation, but just as I was mentioning about white wines, this ones don't have perceptive tannin and quite often can have a bitter linger on the palate, so saying that tannin are bitter can create some confusion to beginners, rather they are astringent and cause a dry sensation on the palate, I always say that one should bite a grape seed when eating grapes, tannin's are all there and that's how they fell.
      You're content's are interesting, please don't take this as a negative comment.
      Cheers

  • @jezifster
    @jezifster 2 года назад +4

    Coming here to understand my white girlfriend better. Personally I prefer canned cocktails but she keeps saying things like zin and buttery chardonnay and im so lost

  • @jackdaniels2905
    @jackdaniels2905 2 года назад

    I am not drinking Merlot.

  • @adminvx
    @adminvx 4 года назад +4

    Your video so informative! THANK YOU

    • @Intovino
      @Intovino  4 года назад +1

      Danson Seet thank you for taking the time to give feedback! So appreciated!