A-Z of Wine Terms

Wine Glossary

Your go-to glossary of wine terms and definitions. From cellaring and provenance to tasting notes - crafted for collectors and curious wine lovers alike.

A

Abbreviation for Appellation d’Origine Contrôlée, (English: Appellation of controlled origin), as specified under French law. The AOC laws specify and delimit the geography from which a particular wine (or other food product) may originate and methods by which it may be made. The regulations are administered by the Institut National des Appellations d’Origine (INAO).

Acronym for “Anything but Chardonnay” or “Anything but Cabernet”. A term conceived by Bonny Doon’s Randall Grahm to denote wine drinkers’ interest in grape varieties.
Abbreviation of alcohol by volume, generally listed on a wine label.
Acids give wine tartness. Several acids are in the grape before fermentation, and others arise afterward. Acids often make a wine seem “crisp” or “refreshing.”
A tasting term for the taste left on the palate after wine has been swallowed. “Finish” is a synonym.
A barrel, often made of oak, used to age wine or distilled spirits.

A wine that is either drunk by itself (i.e. without food) or before a meal in order to stimulate the appetite.

You might see this phrase on a wine label. It denotes the place where most of the grapes used in the wine were grown. An appellation of origin can be the name of a country, state, county or geographic region. Federal regulations require that at least 75 percent of the grapes must be grown in the named appellation of origin.

The smell of a wine. The term is generally applied to younger wines, while the term Bouquet is reserved for more aged wines.

The degree of astringency (how much a wine makes your mouth pucker) depends upon the amount of tannin a wine has absorbed from the skins and seeds of the grapes. A moderate amount of astringency is desirable-it creates a lovely flavour-in many red wine types.

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