French Wine Adventures Virtual Wine Experiences and Online Wine Courses
To find out the latest virtual experiences and wine courses on offer visit our vineyard Chateau Feely website. Options include:
- The Virtual Discovery Wine Course – an immersive wine journey that will leave you with new knowledge and wonder.
- Virtual Wine Activities and Events
- Teambuilding virtual experiences
French Wine Adventures Online Wine School
French Wine Adventure’s online wine school offers a fresh look at wine that takes you into a world of terroir and logic rather than learning a million appellation names by rote. French Wine Adventures is a specialist in sensory wine tasting, wine-growing and wine-making, French Wine, wine and food pairing and organic, biodynamic and natural wine. Caro Feely, teacher and writer, is a recognised expert with over a decade of hands-on experience.
Visit the page for our Virtual Discovery Wine Course – an immersive wine journey.
SENSORY WINE TASTING
‘Who knows how to taste never drinks wine again but tastes secrets.’ Salvador Dalí Whether you are interested in taking your wine knowledge a step further or having a bit of fun with your friends doing wine tasting or both this short summary will introduce you to the idea of sensory wine tasting. This is the start of a series of online wine education that will be available through French Wine Adventures.
Wine tasting is about using your senses. Taking time to appreciate a wine – to fully engage and understand a wine, to sniff, swirl and taste – is a form of respect: respect for the work that went into it; for the nature and sunlight that created it; and for yourself. You could call it ‘mindful’ wine drinking. It’s also a way to learn more about wine and what you like so you can get more enjoyment from it, a way to record your reflections on a wine at a given moment in time. It’s always best to taste with two or more comparative wines but if you only have one that’s OK.
In wine tasting we talk about look, smell and taste but in fact you use your touch and hearing too.
What’s important with sensory wine tasting is to take a moment to concentrate your senses, let go of your other thoughts and be totally focused on the wines. It’s almost like getting into meditation. We could call it mindful wine tasting.
Read on for the summary of the mindful sensory wine tasting mini course pdf available for purchase below.
THE LOOK
Hold your glass sideways over a white background and look at the centre versus the rim of the wine.
What happens when you leave a cut apple out on the counter? It goes brown. Oxidation. All wine tends to brown with age so red goes from purple to ruby to garnet to brick red, change is most noticeable on the rim. A colour change can also be induced in a younger wine by bad storage conditions or a problem in the winemaking.
Compare the colours of the wines. Do this quickly as we don’t want to get into analysis paralysis. It is about using your senses.
THE SMELL
Now take your wine and sniff. Note what aromas you pick up. Are they fruity, floral, herbal, earthy (like a biodynamic calender) or other. Swirl and sniff again and do the same thing. Note what you pick up.
Our senses are personal so you and people tasting with you if you are a group won’t necessarily pick up the same things – your aroma bank is about your memories and experiences which are unique to you.
TRAIN YOURSELF TO SMELL AND DISCOVER JOYS BEYOND WINE
Our brain wants to see what we are smelling so it sees wine and says wine. Try closing your eyes and taking a sniff when you are in the kitchen opening a banana, cutting an apple, using the cinnamon, ginger, honey, butter, walking past a rose, picking up a leather bag, sharpening a pencil or a cold fire grate with soot in it. Train your brain to associate aromas without seeing them. Then take an aromatic wine and see what you find. You may find you even appreciate your food more – a student at our wine school leaned in to sniff something then looked up surprised and said : ‘Caro, you have turned me into a dog!’
THE TASTE
Then taste the wine by swirling it around your mouth sucking a little air through it and then spitting it out (wine spitting is a good idea if you want to learn about wine).
Think about the attack, mid palate and finish, the texture and the components: acidity, alcohol, tannin, flavours and sweetness (red wines are likely to be ‘dry’ meaning not sweet so no residual sugar).
Note all your impressions. Consider your overall assessment of the wine. You will have an instant I like or I don’t like reaction (if you are tasting Feely wines I hope it will be like!). The key is working out what it is that you like so you can explore more wines in that category (and sometimes outside to widen your horizons). Think about what makes the wine stand out.
For more on how to taste buy the pdf that explains sensory wine tasting in detail.
Pour your samples into good glasses, ideally on a white background. Go through the tasting steps look, smell, taste and write down your notes with wine 1. Now do the same with wine 2 and so on. Consider the differences between the wines. If you are tasting in a group chat about what you found and what you think it means.
Purchase the guide online for 5 euro using the button below – we will email you the pdf within 48 hours. Buy a taster case of Feely Organic Biodynamic Wines to test your skills (if you are in the EU).
Make payments with PayPal – it’s fast, free and secure!
Buy the Sensory wine tasting 10 page pdf for 5 euro .
We will email you the pdf within 48 hours.
Let us know what you would like to learn about wine. This is part of a series of online wine education. To receive information about the next available online wine courses select the French Wine Adventures mailing list in the options of the mailing list signup at the bottom right of this page.
Food and Wine Pairing
Food and wine pairing or wine and food pairing is the ultimate pleasure for wine lovers. One of the great pleasures of life is food and wine with excellent company. Perfect pairings can elevate the occasion; when we pair correctly wine+food = pleasure > than the individual parts.
To pair well you need to understand both the wines and the foods you are pairing and the three core principles of wine and food pairing:
- balance between the weight of the wine and the richness of the food
- at least as much acidity in the wine as in the food
- complementing or contrasting aromas and flavours
In our wine and food pairing pdf online wine course we discuss these and other principles in depth and offer experiments for you to do at home to deepen your knowledge and hone your pairing skills. For more on how to pair food and wine buy the pdf that explains wine and food pairing in detail.
Purchase the guide online for 5 euro using the button below – we will email you the pdf within 48 hours.
Make payments with PayPal – it’s fast, free and secure!
Buy the Food and Wine Pairing 18 page pdf for 5 euro.
We will email you the pdf within 48 hours.
Let us know what you would like to learn about wine. To receive information about the next available online wine courses select the French Wine Adventures mailing list in the options of the mailing list signup at the bottom right of this page.
French Wine
This will include the major French wine areas and a paypal button to buy our mini course on French Wine.
French Grand Cru and Grand Cru Classés
This will cover French Grand Crus and Grand Cru Classés and a paypal button to buy our mini course on french grand crus.
Organic, Biodynamic and Natural Wine
This will cover organic, biodynamic and natural wine and a paypal button to buy our mini course on these subjects.
Wine growing
This will cover wine-growing and a paypal button to buy our mini course on this subject.
Wine making
This will cover wine-growing and a paypal button to buy our mini course on this subject.