Wine Tasting for Beginners: How to Not Feel Lost
The fear with your first proper wine tasting is looking like you don't belong — swirling wrong, not knowing the words, nodding along to "notes of gooseberry" while tasting only "wine." Good news: nobody worth listening to expects you to be an expert, and the whole thing is far simpler than the snobbery suggests. Here's what actually happens and how to enjoy it.
The only technique you need: look, smell, sip
Forget the performance. A tasting is three steps: 1. Look — tilt the glass, notice the colour. (You don't have to say anything profound. "Deeper than I expected" is a fine thought.) 2. Smell — swirl gently (to release the aromas), then sniff. Don't overthink the words; "fruity," "earthy," "floral" is plenty. What you're really doing is paying attention. 3. Sip — small sip, let it sit on your tongue a second, then swallow (or spit — more on that below). Notice if it's sharp, smooth, heavy, light.
That's it. Everything else is decoration.
The etiquette nobody explains
- Swirling isn't showing off — it genuinely opens the aromas. A small swirl with the glass on the table is the safe move (less spillage).
- Spitting is normal and expected at serious tastings. The spittoon is there so you can taste ten wines and still walk. Using it isn't rude — it's what the pros do. Nobody judges you for it.
- You don't have to finish every pour. Tip it into the spittoon and move on.
- It's fine to not like a wine. "Not for me" is a complete and acceptable sentence.
How to actually learn something
- Ask the one good question: "What makes this one different from the last?" It gets the pourer talking and teaches you more than any tasting note.
- Ask about the local/native grape — every region has one the big shops ignore. Tasting it is the point of being there rather than buying a bottle at home.
- *Notice what you like and why* — that's the whole goal. Not memorising jargon; building your own taste.
The mindset that makes it fun
You are not being tested. A tasting is a guided way to pay attention to something pleasurable — that's all. The people who enjoy it most aren't the ones with the best vocabulary; they're the ones who relax, ask honest questions, and admit when they love or hate something. Drop the fear of looking like a beginner and you'll learn faster than the person pretending not to be one.
A good guided tasting is the fastest way to go from nervous to confident — and to learn what to order for the rest of your trip. Find tastings and food tours where you're headed →
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