First bottle of wine bought after deciding to get into wines. My SO have been into beer for a long time so we are going start enjoying wine. The first thing I thought after tasting was how smooth it was. It was very easy to drink.
It describes having "Raspberry and Black Cherry notes" the fruitiness was there. However it just tasted like any wine that I have had. Like I said before it was smooth. That's what I liked most about it.
Next it describes Drops of Jupiter having "subtle coffee and caramel tones"
It was definitely subtle. I didn't reconize anything but the fruit.
Tgis is an honest review from someone who knows nothing about wine. I'm curious of what the definitions are between notes and tones in a wine. Are notes defining the taste as you drink the wine? Where as the tones are more at the end and/or aftertaste?
Anyways. I liked drinking this wine. It tasted like wine and was very smooth. Any help or feedback would be great. Cheers to first foot into the wine world!
First bottle of wine bought after deciding to get into wines. My SO have been into beer for a long time so we are going start enjoying wine. The first thing I thought after tasting was how smooth it was. It was very easy to drink.
It describes having "Raspberry and Black Cherry notes" the fruitiness was there. However it just tasted like any wine that I have had. Like I said before it was smooth. That's what I liked most about it.
Next it describes Drops of Jupiter having "subtle coffee and caramel tones"
It was definitely subtle. I didn't reconize anything but the fruit.
Tgis is an honest review from someone who knows nothing about wine. I'm curious of what the definitions are between notes and tones in a wine. Are notes defining the taste as you drink the wine? Where as the tones are more at the end and/or aftertaste?
Anyways. I liked drinking this wine. It tasted like wine and was very smooth. Any help or feedback would be great. Cheers to first foot into the wine world!
Jan 15th, 2020