Your Questions About Wine Tasting

David asks…
place to learn wine tasting in Chicago?
I heard of a place where you pay and I think you learn about wine tasting together with cheeses and bread. I don’t know but I would like to give my dad an entrance to something of this kind. He likes wine but he doesn’t have this kind of knowledge, anyone knows of a place in Chicago of this kind?
Thank you!!!
Wines Manager answers:
Go here: http://www.localwineevents.com/Chicago-Wine/
They have a list of events in and around Chicago. They sound like a blast. I use it to see if there are any around where I reside. Lol

Charles asks…
How can I organise a wine tasting for 12 people at home? What questions should be asked?
I went to a similar event in Chicago but can’t remember the questions! It was done as a fun competition with scores for the person with the most right answers. Wine was restricted to particular region (i.e. New Word) not more than £10/bottle. Questions included color, clarity, after taste, price, name of wine etc. Prizes for whoever got most right. Fun evening, supper included.
Wines Manager answers:
To set up a wine tasting first pick as broad or specific a theme as you like. Beginning tasters might select several wines from a different varietal (grape type) to demonstrate the differences between them. Another option is to choose several wines made from a single varietal to show how a grape type can yield different-tasting wines depending on where the vineyards are located. More experienced tasters hold “vertical” tastings, where wines of a single vineyard or winery in a range of vintages are sampled to determine the best vintage years.
The number of wines served at a tasting varies, but eight to ten is typical. To avoid being influenced by perceptions based on label information, hide the identities of the wines by covering the bottles with foil or placing them in bags sealed with elastic bands or tape. Use numbers or letters for identification (a “blind” tasting). Also provide drinking water, bread or crackers, paper and writing utensils, and containers or “spit buckets” for spitting or dumping excess wine.
At an informal tasting, guests can sample the wines and discuss them one at a time. This saves on glasses and cleanup. Or, to compare the wines side-by-side, serve them in a “flight” (a group of wines for tasting), which requires each person be supplied with a glass for each wine tasted. To serve, pour a small portion–one to two ounces–into clean stemware. If there are both whites and reds to taste, serve the whites first. When everyone has finished tasting the flight, it’s time to discuss the wines. Don’t hesitate to express your opinions. Even inexperienced tasters can be uncannily accurate when it comes to wine.
Click on this Wine Tasting picture to learn how to get Wine Tasting Invitation Postcards
Scoring the wines or naming favorites will yield a group consensus on the best wines of the bunch. The results can be surprising, such as when the least expensive wine takes top honors.
Http://www.bellaonline.com/articles/art33071.asp
http://www.expertrating.com/quizzes/Wine-Etiquette-Quiz.asp
http://www.drvino.com/winequiz2005.php
http://www.wineeducation.com/quiz/quizl/quizl.html
http://www.dewijnhoek.com/engdewijnhoek/spel2.html

Susan asks…
Where can i wine taste in Chicago?
Wines Manager answers:
The Tasting Room
1415 W Randolph St
http://www.thetastingroomchicago.com/main.html
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