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Featured Winery

Heartland Vineyards
24945 Detroit Rd.
Westlake, OH
Open year round. Comfortable underground wine tasting room. Party room also available for parties of 50 or less. We have a complete supply store for the home wine & beer makers. Selling fresh juice when in season and offering award winning Wines, Mead's and Melomel's.
More about this winery >>


Ohio Wine Makes a Great Gift - Check out our Award winners

 

Articles about Ohio's wines and food

I’m drinking what?

Tasting Terminology

A Perfect Match

World-class wines, local vines

Ice Age

Vineyard Adventures

Hobby Uncorked

Curried Peanuts

Sesame Five-Spice Peanuts

Chipotle Spiced Peanuts

Favorite Holiday Drinks

Cheese and Wine Pairings

 

Smell, touch, feel ...

If you’re a wine drinker, you don’t need an excuse to pop open a bottle and enjoy a glass. But lately in Ohio, we have more reasons to toast than ever. Our wines have gone from good to world class, with Ohio wineries landing prominent spots in magazines such as Wine Spectator. But despite this recognition from wine masters, drinking wine is not something you have to be an expert to enjoy. Here are some guidelines for getting the most out of that next bottle.

Appearance A wine’s color tells you a lot about it. Is it dark and plummy? Golden? The more wine you drink, the more you’ll realized the nuances between different varietals, or how the same grape planted in two different areas of the world will reveal differences in their colors. But simply observing the color is a key step in learning more about what you’re drinking.

Smell Why do wine experts swirl their glasses? Because it helps to bring out the aromas of the wine. The next time you’re enjoying a glass, give it a few swirls and stick your nose deep down in your glass (don’t be embarrassed). What do you smell? Flowers? Strawberries? There are no wrong answers. But discovering those smells and how they vary from wine to wine is part of what makes wine so interesting.

Taste Now taste the wine. What do you perceive? Herbs? Black fruits? Common flavor perceptions run the gamut from blueberries to jalapeno peppers, and paying attention when you drink wine will help you recognize them. Eventually, you’ll notice how different styles of wine have different flavor profiles. Scroll down for a list of some of the most common terms wine drinkers use to describe what’s in their glass.

Storing and serving wine

If you’re a serious collector, storing wine is an involved process. But if you’re simply keeping a few bottles on hand, the rules are easy. Wine’s most nefarious enemies are heat and light. Leaving wine in a hot car or a sunny countertop can have an adverse effect on its taste, and render a once-delicious bottle undrinkable.

General serving temperatures

Red
Every expert has their opinion, but in general, most red wines taste best when served at a temperature between 60 to 65 degrees, with lighter and fruitier wines such as Beaujolais showing better at the lower temperature and bigger wines, such as cabernet sauvignon, preferring the other end of the scale. Red wine that is served too cold can taste “tight” and often tannic. Wine that is served too warm will usually taste flabby and, fittingly, “hot,” meaning the alcohol stands out. If you don’t have a basement, popping red wine in the fridge for a few minutes to adjust its temperature is acceptable. Putting it in the freezer and forgetting about it, however, is never a good idea.

White
Getting white right is easy. Serve simple, light, young wines such as domestic riesling colder (between 50 and 55 degrees). More complex whites such as white Burgundy from France show better at warmer temperatures (56 to 62 degrees). Just remember not to overchill your wine (a common mistake with whites) or the flavors will seem tight. Think of it like a flower — when the temperature is too cold, it closes up; when it’s too hot it becomes lifeless; but when the conditions are just right, it blooms.


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