When it comes to selecting wine for your special holiday meal, many of us follow the rule: “Red with meat, white with fish.” If you’re interested in having some of your questions answered to help with your wine selection this holiday, submit your email address on our home page and your wine IQ will increase! You’ll plan your Holiday meal with confidence.
Here’s the rest of our Wine Glossary for 2009!
Remueur A French term for “riddler,” the person in a Champagne house who turns the bottles each day.
Reserva A term that means a wine has extra aging; found on European wines.
Reserve A term found, sometimes, on American wine labels. It has no legal significance, it is usually a better quality wine.
Residual sugar An indication of how dry or sweet a wine is.
Riddling One step of the Champagne making process in which the bottles are turned gradually each day until they are almost upside down with the sediment resting at the neck of the bottle.
Riesling A white grape grown in Alsace, Croatia, Germany and California.
Ruby Port A dark and fruity wine blended from non-vintage wines.
Sancerre A dry white wine from the Loire Valley region of France.
Sangiovese A red grape grown in Tuscany, Italy.
Sauternes A sweet white wine from the Bordeaux region of France.
Sauvignon Blanc A white grape grown primarily in the Loire Valley, Graves and Sauternes regions of France, Washington State and California.
Sec A sweet style of Champagne.
Sekt A German sparkling wine.
Semillon A white grape found in the Graves and Sauternes regions of France.
Short-vatted A term for wine fermented with the grape skins for only a short time.
Silvaner A white grape grown in Germany, Alsace and Croatia.
Solera system A process used to systematically blend various vintages of Sherry.
Sommelier The French term for cellarmaster or wine steward.
Spatlese A white German wine made from the grapes picked later than the normal harvest.
Spumante An Italian sparkling wine.
Stainless steel tank A container used to ferment some wines because of its capability for temperature control; it helps maintain fruitiness, especially in white wines.
St-Veran A white Maconnais wine one step above Macon-Villages in quality.
Style The characteristics of the grapes and the wine.
Sulphur dioxide A substance used in wine making as a preservative.
Suss-Reserve The unfermented grape juice added to German wine after fermentation to give more sweetness.
Syrah A red grape grown in the Rhone Valley region of France.
Tafelwein A German table wine.
Tannin A natural compound that comes from the skins, stems and pips of the grapes and also from the wood that wine is aged in.
Tavel A rose wine from the southern Rhone Valley region of France.
Tawny Port A Port that is lighter, softer and aged longer than Ruby Port.
T.B.A. Abbreviation for the German wine Trockenbeerenauslese.
Tempranillo A red grape grown in Spain.
Thompson seedless A white grape grown in California and usedto make jug wines.
Trebbiano A white grape grown in Italy.
Trocken The German term for “dry.”
Trockenbeerenauslese The richest and sweetest wine made in Germany from the most mature grapes via the process of “Noble Rot.”
Varietal wine A wine that is labeled by the predominant grape used to produce the wine, i.e., a wine from Chardonnay predominantly would be labeled “Chardonnay.”
V.D.Q.S. An abbreviation for Vins Delimites de Qualite Supericure; a classification of French wine, one step below A.O.C.
Veronese wine The wines from Veneto, Italy; Valpolicella, Bardolino, Soave and Amarone.
Village wine A wine that comes from a particular village in Burgundy.
Vin de Pays A French classification of wine one step below V.D.Q.S.
Vinho Verde A white Portuguese wine.
Vino Nobile di Montepulciano A high quality red wine from Tuscany.
Vins de Table Ordinary French table wine.
Vintage The year the grapes were harvested.
Vintage Champagne Champagne made from 100% of a particular vintage.
Vitis labrusca A native grape species in America.
Vitis vinifera A European grape species used to make European and Californian wine.
Vouvray The white “chameleon” wine from Loire Valley region of France; it can be dry, semi-sweet or sweet.
Wood Port Ruby and Tawny Port; they are ready to drink as soon as you buy them.
Zinfandel A red grape grown on the coast of Croatia and California.
Keep the questions and comments coming!
Cheers!
Winedivine
