Barefoot Wine Information Blog

9:03 PM

November 23, 2008 - Wine Terminology

Today's Wine Terminology Article

A Guide to Cooking with Wine



Don't just sip it, eat it!


Want to enhance and improve the taste of your favorite dish? Think that adding wine to your recipe will make it more scrumptious and mouth watering? Well then, you're absolutely right!


Wines are widely used in the cooking world because they intensify taste and zest. They are also capable of releasing flavors from food that are not possible by regular means of cooking.


The main question you must have now is this: What type of wine goes with what type of food?


You have red wines, white wine, sparkly champagne, sherry etc. You have grape vine types like merlot, Sauvignon Blanc, zinfandel, syrah, and Riesling. With the wide variety of them available, picking a wine is pretty tricky. The secret here is to know what combinations are used by professionals.


1. Red Wine


There used to be a rule in cooking that "red wine goes with red meat, white wine with white meat". Although it's not really true anymore, most chefs still go with that.


- For red meat, young and full bodied red wines are recommended. Try going for Zinfandel Red or Merlot.
- For red sauces, robust, full bodied wines are best. Make pasta, pizza or other tomato-sauce based dishes with it.
- Using root veggies with beef stock? You might want to look for an earth red, full bodied wine. The color it imparts to the meat makes it all the more wonderful.


2. White Wine


Cream based sauces, butter and herbs. Yum. White wine is usually used with white meat and best for light colored dishes.


- If you fancy a zesty dish, add some sparkling champagne.
- For chicken, pork or veal, try cooking with white wine. Spice up your grilled chicken by mixing dry, white wine with butter as the sauce.
- Crisp, dry white wines are ideal for seafood soup and shellfish dishes. Bouillabaisse, anyone?
- Leftover sweet white wine in your fridge? Why make delicious, delectable desserts? Whip up some Bavarian cream.


3. Fortified wine


Fortified wines are what they are: fortified. Additional neutral alcohol is added to them. Then they are aged for a long time. Examples are sherry, port and vermouth.


- Sherry is great for poultry meat and vegetables soups.
- For sweet, fruity dishes or desserts, splash some port or vermouth. Your dry vermouth can also be a good substitute for white wine.


4. Cooking wine


Cooking wines are relatively less pricey wines that use salt as a preservative. They can be found in supermarkets and groceries. Most professional chefs disdain the use of cooking wines because the salt content is hard to work with. You may need to adjust your recipe to work with the saltiness.


5. Exotic wines


Cooking is an experiment. If you're feeling bold and daring, you could try cooking with exotic wines. Asian wines are popular choices for an all together different meal. There is the sake, bekseju and seol joong mae.


- Sake is a rice based wine from Japan. Although it's mainly a beverage, it is popular as an additive to many Japanese dishes.


- Beksuju is a Korean wine made from raw rice and herbs. It can be used in vegetable dishes to increase the 'herbal' feel. Seol Joong Mae, a fruit wine made from plum, can be used for desserts and fruity dishes.


I hope that clears up some of your confusion. With that said, here are some few reminders for the novice cook:


- Cook only with wine that you would drink. There is no sense in cooking something that you wouldn't want to taste.
- There are a lot of good, quality yet inexpensive wines out there. Don't get too carried away and buy something that's way off your budget.
- Don't cook using aluminum or cast iron cookware. Alcohol is reactive with these materials and could cause harm to your dish.
- After adding your wine, try to wait for 5-10 minutes before tasting it. Wine needs to simmer for a while before it can impart flavor to your food.
- Got some left over wine? Put them in your ice cube tray and freeze them. This makes them good for future use.


Get your favorite recipe, pick a wine and start cooking!

About the Author


Lee Dobbins, an avid wine drinker, writes for http://wine.leisure-webzone.com where you can learn more about wine and when to use it properly.

A Short Wine Terminology Summary

A Guide to Cooking with Wine


Don't just sip it, eat it!
Want to enhance and improve the taste of your favorite dish? Think that adding wine to your recipe will make it more scrump...


Click Here to Read More About Wine ...

Wine Terminology Items For Viewing

Selezioni Dolcetto D Alba


A low-acid varietal cultivated mostly in Piedmont, Dolcetto wines are soft, round and highly quaffable. You'll note flavors of licorice and almonds complementing a distinctive structure and character courtesy of the area's fertile soils. There's also an intense, fragrant nose plus a dry, mellow palate promoting ripe black fruits and sour cherries each magnified through 12 months of the wine's oak ageing. Medium bodied, it bolsters a crimson red hue that tends towards garnet with age. Enjoy the 2001 Selezioni Rodellesi Dolcetto D'Alba with pasta with red sauces enhanced by anchovies ( a native favorite), red meats and a variety of hard cheeses. SDAW01 SDAW01


Price: 22.99 USD



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9:03 PM

11/23/08 - Wine Type

Wine Type For Your Reading Pleasure

The Basics Of Wine Tasting


Wine tasting is an assessment of a wine's quality. It's not just about taste but also covers aroma, color, the way it feels in one's mouth and how long the wine persists in the mouth after tasting. Wine tasting is also one way to determine the maturity of the wine and whether it is suitable for aging or for immediate drinking. Its purpose it to discover the key facets of the wine in order to appreciate it better in every sense of the word.

Wine tasting also serves to compare a particular wine with others that fall into the same price range, region or vintage - its quality, whether it is typical of the region it was made in, whether it uses certain wine making techniques and if it has any faults. It may sound hard to believe, but practiced wine tasters can actually tell if a wine was made through oak fermentation or malolactic fermentation. Their taste buds and their noses are simply that well-developed.

In wine tasting, wine is often served "blind," meaning that the taster should not see the wine's label because he might be influenced by it and to ensure impartial judgment of the wine.

Wine should be served at temperatures of 16 and 18 degrees centigrade (60 and 64 degrees fahrenheit). It is at this temperature that the wine's flavor and aroma is said to be most detectable. It is important that wines be served at the same temperature so that they can be judged using the same standards. The one exception is in the case of sparkling wine, which is usually served chilled mainly because sparkling wine does not taste well when it is warm.

Since wines do not taste alike, the order of tasting the wine is also important. For instance, heavy or sweet wine leaves a lingering taste that can affect the taste of succeeding lighter wines. There is actually a preferred order of tasting: sparkling wines; light whites, then heavy whites; roses; light reds; heavy reds; sweet wines.

So, the next time you see someone smelling his wine or just gently dabbing it on his tongue and lips, you have a better idea of what's going on. In truth, it looks foreign and a little complicated, but anyone can be an accomplished wine taster with some practice. All you have to do is drink more wine. What could be easier?


About the Author:

Kadence Buchanan writes articles on many topics including Cooking, Outdoor Living, and Health and our world





A synopsis on Wine Type.

The Basics Of Wine Tasting


Wine tasting is an assessment of a wine's quality. It's not just about taste but also covers aroma, color, the way it feels in one's mouth and how lon...


Click Here to Read More About Wine ...

Recommended Wine Type Items

Scheurebe Spaetlese


Our Riesling Kabinett wine comes from the Scheurebe grape; this semi sweet white wine from Germany is crafted from a crossing of the Riesling and Sylvaner grape varieties. We all know the Riesling brings to the table good acidity, and a lot of character; the Sylvaner is soft and gentle, making the Scheurebe wine a new, exiting delicious wine. Up front racy with a little apple finishing in a soft style. Serve Chilled, it goes great with turkey and cranberries, pork with applesauce and many classic dinner dishes. You can buy this wine gift online. GWRSS701 GWRSS701


Price: 21.95 USD



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World Leaders Seek to Head Off Deep RecessionFox BusinessWASHINGTON,--Leaders of the world's biggest economies sought Saturday to settle their remaining differences over an emergency plan to blunt the bite of the worst financial crisis in decades.Presidents and prime ministers from the powers of the 20th Century joined the heads of new economic heavyweights such as export colossus China and oil-rich Saudi Arabia.They sat down with their finance ministers for a five-hour meeting in a Washington m


Pinot Noir
Housewarming Wine?

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