Test your basic knowledge |

Wine Production 101

Subjects : hospitality, industries
Instructions:
  • Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
  • If you are not ready to take this test, you can study here.
  • Match each statement with the correct term.
  • Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.

This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. In general - the results of canopy management studies for Cabernet Sauvignon have shown results like those for...






2. What might lead you to have more olfactory fatigue while tasting red wines?






3. In white table wines - this color is a sign that the wine has been exposed to too much air in production or has been bottle aged too long






4. When Botrytis grow on the surface of a grape it penetrates the skin enabling water to evaporate during a period of __________ weather.






5. What sensory change would you not expect as a fine bottle of Cabernet Sauvignon ages?






6. Because nearly all white table wines are valued principally for their youthful - fruity characteristics - the vast majority of white wines are aged in neutral containers only for as long as it takes to clarify and stabilize them. Only a tiny minority






7. About ______ the fruit for dessert wine production goes to produce the alcohol for fortification - making the per ton yield of finished wine __________ gallons.






8. What additional changes occur in wines that undergo the malolactic fermentation?






9. More distinctive grape varieties - many from Portugal - and cooler growing regions are associated with this group of fortified dessert wines.






10. Which red wine grape is preferred when grown in Region I?






11. In order to make sparkling wine you need to build a winery for the _______________ process.






12. If the amounts of the chemicals responsible for the celery/fresh vegetable - herbaceous - or ____________ of Sauvignon Blanc are reduced - fruity flavors of grapefruit - pineapple - melon - and fig emerge.






13. When the stimulus alcohol present in high amounts in a wine - you can expect to experience both a taste and a tactile sensation. These sensations are






14. Define 'canes'






15. Because most of the world's white table wines emphasize the aroma of the grapes and the MLF ___________ - most winemakers take precautions to prevent the MLF altogether in these wines.






16. Several grape clones may share...






17. The wine type refers to a winemaker's characteristic way of combining and balancing the sensory features that distinguish a particular wine to create an individualistic expression of that wine.


18. _______ can be produced when press juice is fermented and then distilled.






19. What is the 'retro nasal route'?


20. What additional evidence of yeast growth and metabolism besides the drop in degrees Brix do wineries measure during the active stage of fermentation?






21. Flavors are actually odors - or 'in-mouth smells' - that reach our ______________ when we hold the wine in our mouths.






22. About how much of a cuv






23. Winemakers taste the fortifying alcohol and match it to the wine being made because...






24. The average ____________ - involves five tasters who examine 30 wines per day in one to three sessions.






25. Our appreciation of wines is mainly due to their...






26. In filtering - the wine is forced through media that vary in 'tightness' from those that trap and remove just the very largest particles (chunks of grape skins) to those that take out...






27. Adaptation is a change in sensitivity that occurs in response to different levels of stimulation. Winetasters learn to work with olfactory adaptation by resting 15-45 seconds between _____ when evaluating wines.






28. The maximum _____________ of our sense of smell has been estimated at one part per million to several parts per trillion.






29. You are going to make your mark in the wine world by creating a rare style of dry Chenin Blanc with a lot of oak character. What aging regine would you use?






30. Why is it detrimental to sparkling wines to swirl them while making a sensory evaluation?






31. At what blood alcohol concentration do most people perceive the maximum relaxation?






32. We can only smell volatile molecules that can evaporate from the ____________ of a wine at the range of temperatures at which it is customarily served.






33. Modern premium winemaking equipment allows the extraction of about 135-185 gallons of juice per ton of grapes. It's (about) ____ times more free-run than press-run.






34. For winemaking the most important sugar in grape juice is sucrose.






35. Overall quality in red wines is correlated with total color and...






36. Growers control phylloxera by means of






37. After the re-corking that follows the removal of the yeast and adjustment of sugar - sparkling wines develop in the bottle in much the same way as do white table wines.


38. The _________ is better because it comes from inside the grapes where the carbonic maceration occurred.






39. Which odor descriptors would you expect to find in the bottle bouquet of a fine - well-aged 1978 Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon






40. The average maceration time for California Napa Gamay is about four days and for Cabernet Sauvignon is 7-8 days. This means that the average _________ is intended for more aging than the average __________.






41. What do carbonic maceration and m






42. When is the mechanism of taste dependent on saliva?






43. Which odor descriptors would you expect to find in a fine bottle of 1992 Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon?






44. What is reserve wine and how is it used in methode champenoise sparkling wine production?






45. It is critical for winemakers to control the _____________ to be sure that it is completed before bottling.






46. PTC tasting is a well-documented example of how dramatically people can vary in their ability to taste something bitter and it accurately predicts a person's sensitivity to bitterness in wines.


47. The most important step in red wine production for determining the style of a wine.






48. If wine can be made perfectly clear simply with settling and racking - why do few wineries rely on these methods?


49. The degree to which a grapevine's foliage and fruit are exposed to light can determine the amount of...






50. The yield of juice per ton is ________ to 75-90 gallons per ton.