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Approachable

Drinkable, easy to enjoy


Aromatic

Descriptive term for wines of a markedly flowery, spicy or grapey character


Beefy

Term for reds meaning solid or chunky


Big

Ample amount of concentrated fruit, character, tannins, etc.


Buttery

A smell, especially in oak-aged Chardonnay, not a tactile sensation


Chewy

Wine with a lot of tannin and strong flavor


Clean

Wine with no bacterial or chemical faults and a simple direct flavor


Complex

Depth of flavor and nuances, an interesting wine that reveals lots of different aromas and flavor characteristics


Crisp

Has generous amounts of acidity, generally a fresh, clean wine in a lighter style


Deep

Term for full-flavored reds and whites, often applied to wines still not at their peak

Dry

Has no residual sugar or sense of sweetness. This doesn't mean all you taste is acid


Dusty

Usually applied to hot, country reds, in particular wines from the southern Rhone


Earthy

The smell of rich earth or minerals. A positive comment


Fat

A heavy, sometimes slightly clumsy wine. Though if made from fully ripe grapes it can imply a rather unctuous richness in the wine, sweet or dry


Finish

Flavors and feel of the wine on the back of your tongue and after you swallow. The finish can be big, smooth, etc.


Freshness

The youthful aromas in a wine, usually associating good acidity with floral or fruit flavors


Fruit

Term, literally, for the fruit element in a wine. It may not taste of grapes, but it will resemble a fruit of some kind -- e.g., black currant, strawberry, apple -- and is crucial to the flavor of any wine


Fullness

The feel, or weight, of a wine in the mouth


Grapey

Quite rare flavor of the grape itself in wine. Most common with Muscat, Beaujolais, Gewürztraminer and Riesling


Green

Unripe, or tart, not necessarily an unattractive taste in a light wine


Hard

Usually applied to reds which have an excess of tannin. In young reds, this is often necessary to support the aging process


Honeyed

Applied to ripe wines which, sweet or dry, have a taste or aroma of honey


Jammy

Rather big, cooked sweetish red wines


Length

The way a good wine's flavors continue to evolve in the mouth even after swallowing


Nutty

Usually for dry whites -- a soft brazil or hazelnut flavor in Chardonnay, a woodier taste in Chenin or Sauvignon, and a dry richness in medium dry or Madeiras


Oaky

The slightly sweet vanilla flavor imparted by maturation in oak casks


Oxidized

A wine exposed to too much air


Plummy

Often applied to big, round, ripe reds from Pomerol, St-Emilion, Cote Du Nuits and Napa


Prickly

A wine with slight residual gas in it. Usually attractive in light young whites, but in reds it is often a sign of refermentation in bottle


Racy

A light wine of quality with lively acidity


Smoky

Many wines do have a smoky taste, especially when slightly charred oak barrels have been used for maturation


Soft

Mellow, well-rounded, mature tannins and little evidence of acidity


Spicy

Exotic fruit and spice flavors in whites, particularly Gewürztraminer, but also a peppery or cinnamony clovey perfume in some reds


Steely

Applied to top Riesling for the very dry, almost metallic flavor they develop


Supple

Soft textured, round on the palate, fully mature tannins


Sweet

Tasting term, applied not only to sweet wines, but tannins to the elements of ripeness or richness which good quality dry wines can often suggest


Tart

Green, unripe wine. Can be desirable in light dry wines


Toasty

The barrel smell and taste imparted to oak-fermented white wines and barrel-aged white burgundy


Tough

Usually implying too much tannin


Vanilla

The smell of new oak


Varietal

Dominating grape in the wine. U.S. wines must be at least 75% of the varietal that appears in the label

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