
Key Wine Terms
Learn these Terms Before Heading Out to Wine Country
One thing that never ceases to amaze us about people in the wine business is how welcoming they are to newbies. They don’t care what you know; they just care that you’re curious to know more, and they’re eager to teach you.
If you’re planning to head out to wine country, here are some basic terms you should know for a fulfilling experience.
Wine Terms 101
Aroma or Nose
The way the wine smells. Some common terms used to describe the aroma or nose: floral, fruity, earthy, citrus, vegetal.
Body
The impression of a wine’s fullness on your palate. A wine higher in alcohol will taste fuller bodied, whereas a lower-alcohol wine will tend to be lighter. In the middle? It’s medium-bodied.
Fruit-Forward
This means you’re primarily tasting fruits—from blackberries to mangoes. California offers many fruit-forward wines.
Jammy
When wine tastes like cooked fruit, typically berries. This can be good or bad, but jammy wine can be delicious!
Earthy
Earthy wines are more savory. Think spice, rocks (chalk or flint are common), smoked meats, cured meats, chocolate.
Herbaceous
Wines often have dried- or fresh-herb flavors.
Acidity
This is how astringent or sour a wine tastes. If a wine makes your mouth water, it has a nice level of acidity. If unpleasantly sharp, it’s too acidic. If flat or flabby, it lacks acidity.
Blend
A wine featuring more than one grape type. Many Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignons, for instance, contain Merlot or other grapes.
Balance
Wines that are balanced have a harmonious blend of flavors.
Dry
As opposed to sweet.
Complex/Layered
A wine with overlapping flavors, some of which evolve over time in your mouth.
Vintage
The year on the label means the year the grapes were harvested.
Brut
Unsweet Champagne or sparkling wine.
Extra Brut
Even more so.
Cuvée
A blended wine, often sparkling.
Tannins
These compounds come from grapes’ skins, seeds, and stems and oak barrels used for aging. A great preservative, tannins ensure long aging. You can taste them most distinctly in red wines as a dry and lip-puckering sensation. Overly tannic wines can be bitter.
Typicity
If a Napa Cab expresses typicity, it displays all the characteristics you’d expect from that region and grape.
Hot
When a wine is too high in alcohol, it tastes “hot.”
Vinification
The process of making wine.
Cork Taint
If a wine tastes like musty, dusty clothing, it’s said to be “corked.” Tainted (moldy) corks create this flavor from time to time.
For wine lovers, the journey is as important as the knowledge. You probably know more than you think, and you’ll definitely know more after hitting the wine trail.
Happy sipping!