30 seconds on how I rate beverages...

I try to rate wines with a view to how we normal folks consume them.

As we all know, wines can change dramatically over time in your glass. I see that as an elemental part of wine rating, one often missed by the time demands placed on professional tasters.

I analyze over hours - not just the seconds many wine sages usual have.

When I don't finish a given bottle, I will even take notes again the next day to gauge how well the wine survived overnight slumber in the fridge.

A detailed rating key can be found beneath the post below.

Cheers and happy drinking!

Keith

USA, Chardonnay, Far Niente, 2006

The 2006 Estate Chard was what Chards can, and should, be.  


T/ Weight that coats your entire mouth for minutes on end, so round, so full, basically unreal when compared to most Chards. 


Note: The 2004 “cave collection” Chard was even deeper.  


Note 2: About 50$ retail.


These are must-try Chardonnays.


Astounding.
97

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Ratings KEY detail

I list the country of origin first, then the name of the grape varietal, the maker, and finally the year.


C/ = Color. Rarely noted unless unique for that varietal.

N/ = Nose, aroma - how it smells.

T/ = Taste, mouthfeel, finish.

95-100 Astounding. Total quality on all fronts. Seriously memorable. The starting material must have been near perfect, and the makers clearly took pride in their art.

90-94 Brilliant. Special stuff indeed. Do what you can to try it, you will not be disappointed.

85-89 Very Good. Above average quality. Worth a try.

80-84 Good. Average.

75-79 Fair.

50-74 Yuck. Avoid. Don't even think about trying. A disaster.

Notes

Both the Astounding and Brilliant ratings are accompanied by a label picture.

I usually decant red wines at least 20 minutes before tasting begins.

My ratings reflect my perceptions over at least a hour of smelling and sipping. I don't spit (unless I'm at a large tasting event).

I try to taste at the same time of day, in the same glass, and without food to be as objective as possible.

Many wines I will vaccu-vin, refrigerate, and rate the next days or days to see how they hold up.

In short, I try to rate wines from the view of how we drink as normal consumers. Having 50 wines in front of me and spending 60 seconds on each does not seem objective enough to me.

Wines are only rated against other wines in the same price category.
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