Week 1 Tasting Activities
Photo by Nils Stahl on Unsplash
Put your knowledge to the test with these self-guided tasting exercises. You don’t need expensive bottles — the goal is learning. Budget $10-20 per bottle and you’ll do just fine.
Day 1: Same Grape, Different Worlds
Goal: Experience how geography transforms the same grape variety.
Setup
Pick one grape and buy 2-3 bottles from different regions:
Option A — Pinot Noir:
- Burgundy (France) — $15-25
- Willamette Valley (Oregon) — $15-25
- Central Otago (New Zealand) — $15-25
Option B — Cabernet Sauvignon:
- Bordeaux (Left Bank, Cab-dominant blend) — $12-20
- Napa Valley (California) — $15-30
- Maipo Valley (Chile) — $10-15
Option C — Sauvignon Blanc:
- Sancerre (Loire Valley, France) — $15-25
- Marlborough (New Zealand) — $10-15
- Casablanca Valley (Chile) — $8-12
Tasting Notes Template
Wine: [Name, Region, Vintage, Price]
Visual: [Color intensity, clarity, rim variation]
Nose: [Primary aromas, fruit character, oak/earth notes]
Palate: [Body, acidity, tannins, alcohol, finish length]
Pairing: [What food would you pair this with?]
Takeaway: [What surprised you?]
Discussion Questions
- Could you taste the climate difference? (Cool = higher acid, red fruit vs. Warm = riper, darker fruit)
- Which felt more “fruit-forward” and which felt more “earthy/mineral”?
- Which offered the best value for money?
Day 2: Regional Exploration
Goal: Sample wines from 3 different countries and try a blind tasting.
Wine Selection (pick one from each)
- France: Burgundy, Rhône, or Loire
- Italy: Chianti Classico, Barbera d’Asti, or Soave
- New World: Oregon Pinot, Argentine Malbec, NZ Sauvignon Blanc, or Aussie Shiraz
Exercise: Blind Tasting
- Have someone else pour — or bag the bottles so you can’t see labels
- Pour ~2oz of each into identical glasses
- Take notes using the template above
- Try to guess: Old World or New World? Which country? Which grape?
- Reveal and discuss what you got right (and wrong)
Key Questions
- Could you distinguish Old World from New World?
- Which region’s style surprised you most?
- What does “terroir” taste like to you now?
Day 3: Climate Comparison
Goal: Understand how climate affects wine style with the same or similar grapes.
Wine Selection
- Cool Climate: Mosel Riesling OR Chablis Chardonnay OR Willamette Valley Pinot Noir
- Moderate Climate: Bordeaux red OR Chianti Classico OR Napa Chardonnay
- Warm Climate: Barossa Shiraz OR Mendoza Malbec OR Southern Rhône Grenache blend
What to Look For
| Cool Climate | Moderate | Warm Climate | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Acidity | High, mouth-watering | Balanced | Softer, rounder |
| Fruit | Red berries, citrus | Mix of red and dark | Dark fruit, jammy |
| Alcohol | Lower (11-13%) | Medium (13-14%) | Higher (14-15%+) |
| Body | Light to medium | Medium | Medium to full |
Notes Template
Cool Climate Wine: ________________
- Body: Light / Medium / Full
- Acidity: High / Medium / Low
- Fruit character: [describe]
- Alcohol (check label): ____%
Warm Climate Wine: ________________
- Body: Light / Medium / Full
- Acidity: High / Medium / Low
- Fruit character: [describe]
- Alcohol (check label): ____%
What's the biggest difference you notice?
Day 4: Tasting Challenges
Challenge 1: The Grape Variety Game
Goal: Learn to identify grapes by their characteristics.
Pick 4 wines (2 red, 2 white):
- Pinot Noir (red) — lighter color, red fruit, silky
- Cabernet Sauvignon (red) — dark, tannic, structured
- Chardonnay (white) — varies hugely by region and oak treatment
- Sauvignon Blanc (white) — aromatic, herbaceous, crisp
For each wine, note:
- Fruit profile (red fruit? dark fruit? citrus? tropical?)
- Oak influence (vanilla? toast? or clean/unoaked?)
- Structure (acid-driven? tannin-driven? balanced?)
Challenge 2: Blend vs. Single Variety
Goal: Understand what blending accomplishes.
Selection:
- A Bordeaux blend (Cabernet + Merlot + others)
- A single-variety Cabernet (Napa or Chile)
- Optionally: a Rhône blend (Grenache-Syrah-Mourvèdre) vs. a single-variety Syrah
Questions:
- Does blending add complexity? (Usually yes — different grapes fill different roles)
- Does single-variety show a purer expression of place?
- Which style do you prefer? (No wrong answer)
Tasting Score Sheet
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WEEK 1 TASTING JOURNAL
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Date: ________________ Day: __________
Wine: _________________________________________
Region: __________________ Country: __________
Price: __________ Alcohol: ___________%
Visual (1-5): _____
[ ] Light [ ] Medium [ ] Dark
[ ] Clear [ ] Hazy
Aroma (1-5): ____
Fruit: _____________________________________
Floral/Herb: _______________________________
Earth/Mineral: _____________________________
Oak: _______________________________________
Palate (1-5): ____
Body: Light / Medium / Full
Acidity: High / Medium / Low
Tannin: Low / Medium / High
Alcohol: Low / Medium / High
Finish Length:
[ ] Short (<5s) [ ] Medium (5-10s) [ ] Long (10s+)
Top 3 Descriptors:
1. ___________________________________________
2. ___________________________________________
3. ___________________________________________
Would I buy again? YES / NO / MAYBE
Would I recommend? YES / NO
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Week 1 Challenge: The World Tour
Goal: Build a 6-wine tasting flight spanning the globe.
Your Mission
- Pick 6 wines from at least 4 different countries
- Include at least 1 white and 1 red
- Aim for a mix of climates (cool, moderate, warm)
- Budget: $10-20 per bottle ($60-120 total)
Suggested Approach
Ask your local wine shop: “I’m exploring different wine regions — can you help me pick six bottles from different countries in the $10-20 range?” Wine shop staff love this kind of request.
Budget Guide
| Budget | Strategy | |——–|———-| | $60-80 | Focus on value regions: Chile, Argentina, Portugal, Southern France | | $80-120 | Mix in a Burgundy, Oregon Pinot, or Barossa Shiraz | | $120+ | Add a Champagne, Barolo, or Napa Cab |
Digital Resources
Apps
- Vivino: Scan any bottle for ratings and reviews
- CellarTracker: Serious tasting notes and cellar management
- Wine Folly: Visual guides to grape varieties and regions
Websites
- JancisRobinson.com: One of the most respected wine critics on earth (some content free)
- Wine Enthusiast / Wine Spectator: Reviews and ratings
- GuildSomm: If you want to go deeper (sommelier-level content)
Week 1 Completion Checklist
- Read Old World regions
- Read New World regions
- Read Climate & Terroir
- Complete Day 1 tasting (Same Grape, Different Worlds)
- Complete Day 2 tasting (Regional Exploration)
- Complete Day 3 tasting (Climate Comparison)
- Complete Day 4 challenges
- Fill out tasting journal entries
- Complete World Tour challenge
Reflection Questions:
- What region surprised you most?
- Which wine style do you prefer — Old World or New World?
- What’s one thing you learned that you’ll share with someone this week?