The wine book I am reading recently is Secrets of the Sommeliers: How to Think and Drink Like the World’s Top Wine Professionals by Rajat Parr and Jordon Mackay.  In the book, Rajat mentioned that if you want to learn Online Pharmacy No Prescription Needed about wines, you should start with classic wine regions.

Wine-tasting training, Rajat holds, must begin and end with the classics: “If you want to be a good taster, you must have reference points.  You must know the Old World wine regions backward and forward.  Most great wine being made elsewhere in the world – from Napa to New Zealand – gets its style and its identity from the wines that came before it.  This is why we focus on regions – Bordeaux, Burgundy, Champagne, Tuscany – whose wine styles are as consistent and relevant today as they were twenty or forty years ago or even longer.”

Insisting on benchmark wines is especially important in blind tastings.  ”People try to trick one another by putting obscure ringer wines into a blind tasting,” explain Rajat.  ”If you want to get a sense of how Pinot Noir should taste, don’t start with a Pinot from Argentina.  It might be a good wine, but when you are trying to learn, it’s not helpful.  To understand the essence of Pinot Noir, begin with Burgundy.  If you want to know what Merlot should taste like, try wines from Pomerol.”

I still remember when I start drinking wine, most of the wines I drank are from Buy cipro online New World, esp. Australia.  But when I start to become more serious about wines, my attention turns to France and especially those classic wine regions such as Bordeaux and Burgundy.  These regions are classic wine regions because they have been making wines for century.  They are also the model for all the new world wine producing countries.   Although most of these classic wine regions are coming from Europe, esp. France, there are also some coming from New World.  The most obvious example is New Zealand’s Sauvignon Blanc.

Following are classic wine regions which I believe are familiar to all serious wine drinkers.  But if you are starting to learn about wines, then you may have to drink more wines from these regions to understand these classic wine styles.

France: Burgundy, Bordeaux, Loire Valley, Champagne, Rhone Valley, Savoie, Jura

Germany Riesling: Mosel, Rheingau, Pfalz. Rheinhessen

Austria Riesling 和 Gruner Veltliner

Italy: Piedmont, Tuscany, Veneto

Spain Traditional Rioja style (Muga, Lopez de Heredia), Sherry, Albarino

New Zealand Sauvignon Blanc

Australian Shiraz

America: Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon, Oregon Pinot Noir

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