Wine
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I really do not know very much about wine. In fact, I think any kind of wine goes with any kind of food, but the people who know about those kind of things say match the wine to what you are planning to eat. Today, that is not always the case. Taste Wine and Enjoy has easy food and wine pairing tips to help with choosing wines.
I am now trying to get educated about wine! You could spend a couple of weeks studying the different types of wine. Some experts have spent a life time! With the knowledge most of us have, I think it is always best to try new wines out on yourself first...I mean you wouldn't want to be a bad host and experiment on your guests...right? Now, at what temperature do you serve the wine? I like the advice of Ursula Hermacinski, the former Christie’s wine auctioneer, when it comes to knowing what temperature to serve a wine: “Twenty minutes before dinner, you take the white wine out of the fridge, and put the red wine in.” This rule is intended to fix the two most common mistakes in wine service: People tend to serve white wines too cold and red wines too warm. Now, this is not something to wake up at 3 a.m. and worry about, but the fact is that properly chilled wines do taste better. 
White wine that is too warm will taste alcoholic and flabby, while white wines too cold will be refreshing but nearly tasteless. As for reds, keep them too warm and they will taste soft, alcoholic and even vinegary. Too cold and they will have an overly tannic bite and much less flavor. I am sure it has something to do with the orbit apogee of the volatile wine molecules around the olfactory nerve receptors, but we don’t need to go there. Here’s how to be confident the wine you serve will be on its best behavior: Champagne and other sparkling wines should start out totally chilled. Put them in the refrigerator an hour and half before serving or in an ice bucket with an ice-water mixture at least 20 minutes before serving. For vintage-dated Champagne and other high-quality bubbly, however, you should let the bottle then warm up a bit if you don''t want to miss out on the mature character for which you’re probably paying extra. Sauvignon Blanc, Pinot Grigio, white Zinfandel and other refreshing white wines should also be chilled to refrigerator temperature (usually 35 to 40 degrees) for an hour and a half before serving. But the better examples, such as barrel-aged wines like Fume Blanc (made from Sauvignon Blanc grapes) will improve if brought out 20 minutes early or allowed to warm up slightly during hors d’ouevres or dinner. Chardonnay, white Burgundy and other rich, full-bodied and barrel-fermented white wines of high quality taste their best at classic “cellar temperature,” or 55 degrees. Winemakers in France’s Burgundy region know what they’re doing when they offer tastes to visiting journalists and wine buyers directly from the barrels of Chardonnay in their cool, humid underground cellars. So put these into the fridge an hour and half before serving, but bring them out 20 minutes early to warm a bit.
Sweet dessert wines need the same treatment as Sauvignon Blanc, above, with the exception of fortified dessert wines like Port and sweet Sherry, which are better at cellar temperature or warmer. Treat dry Sherry like Sauvignon Blanc, too. Almost all red wines show their best stuff when served at about 65 degrees—cool, but warmer than cellar temperature. This is not room temperature, unless you happen to live in a Scottish castle or in San Francisco during July. So if you don’t keep your red wine in a cool cellar or cooled storage unit, you will enjoy it more if you chill it for 20 minutes in the refrigerator before serving. So you do have some things to learn about wine. What better way than to travel the world and taste test all of the different wine regions in the world. You could spend years and years going through all those wonderful regions--and wines. Kinda hard to do. So the next best thing is to bring the tour of the world to your own kitchen. Become an expert without leaving your own home. They deliver. Check it out! And don't forget the after dinner cigar. Click on this photo and begin your wine tour.
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