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The Expert French Wine Gift Giver

An expert wine lover and gift giver is an "amateur', in the understanding of good wine. He is able to appreciate the different qualities, or faults, of a wine. When ordering wine gifts he is aware of what he may expect by the name of a wine.

He knows which wine gifts are usually preferred with what foods but still feels entirely free to follow his own preferences. He knows that great and old wines should be treated carefully but he also knows that younger wines are handled in a more casual manner. He always drinks moderately.

As expert as a wine lover may be, he is still an amateur", He does not know, in fact does not need to know, what professional experts spend their lives in learning,

When it comes down to its raison d'être" wine is made to be enjoyed by the amateur. The test of the wine is in the taste. An educated taster may discover more subtle qualities, he may better appreciate the degree of perfection achieved by a specific wine.

The most expert wine taster has an exquisitely refined taste and a tremendous frame of references, but he has, basically, the same taste as we ail have. He has started as we ail do. with an uneducated palate and no terms of comparison.

He has learned the only way there is to learn through attentive drinking, trying to analyze what he likes or dislikes and remembering as well as he can the character of each wine tasted. After years and years of experiments, the professional expert has developed a keener taste. but not a different one.

French wines have been drunk for centuries in all the known world, and as new lands were discovered. French wines won new markets and new devotees.

Anybody may become a connoisseur and once he is one, his tastes are as valid as anybody elses. When experimenting with wine it is well for one to remember that:

·     Unopened bottles may be kept for a few months, even under poor conditions, without any bad effects to the wine. If you don't have the facilities to build a good wine cellar, you can stock a few cases of wine if they are to be drunk in a matter of months.  

  • When some wine is left in a bottle after dinner, by recorking the bottle, the wine will keep for a few days - much longer if it is a white or rosé wine which is kept in the refrigerator.
     
  • The sense of taste is not hopelessly spoiled by one drink of a stronger beverage before the meal. What spoils the taste (for wine as for anything else, including food) is an excess of "drinks" before eating.
     
  • Smoking does not dull the taste for people who are regular smokers. However. better not smoke at the same time as you are drinking wine because of the lingering aroma of the smoke. Eat a small piece of bread or a piece of food before drinking in order to re-establish a neutral background.

People who are occasional smokers may find that smoking before a wine tasting does impair their taste.

  • Estate or chateau bottled wines represent only a minute portion of all the wine produced in France. Parish and regional wines entitled to an “Appellation Contrôlée” or a "V.D.Q.S." are very high quality wines. They represent no more than 10% of the total crop of France, the first wine producing country in the world.
     
  • A wine basket is lovely but it does not serve any purpose at the dinner table. Its only purpose is to carry the wine from the cellar without shaking the bottle unnecessarily.

When serving, if the wine has sediment, the rocking resulting from pouring from a basket will move the sediment and carry it into all the wine; if there is no sediment the wine basket does not do any harm - nor any good either.
 

 

 

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