
Learn about wine or beer tasting.
🌍 Anywhere🔄 Repeatable👤 18+
food-and-drinklearning
Learn to identify flavor notes, aromas, and quality markers in wine or craft beer through guided tastings or online courses. Start with comparing different styles side-by-side to train your palate - try a light lager versus an IPA, or a Pinot Noir versus a Cabernet. You'll develop a sophisticated appreciation and never again wonder why some bottles cost more than others.
Difficulty
25/100Medium
💰
Cost
$20 – $100
⏱
Time
2hours
👥
People
1+
🔄
Setting
either
📅
Season
any
🎒
Equipment
None needed
People who tried this
“Personally, I like getting tasting menus from breweries and brewpubs where all the beers come from the same place. Not only do you get to sample most or all of the beers from that brewery, but you get to see how a single brewer or brew team approaches the brewing process and how they see themselves in the bigger brewing world. That sounds more pretentious than I wanted it to. Lemme explain. Two weekends ago, I was in the Adirondacks and ended up at a new brewpub, Big Slide. This is actually a new project from the folks who run Lake Placid Brewing, which is a very solid regional brewer in the Northeast. Big Slide is only two months old and everything is super shiny and nice — a labor of love. The food was pretty darn great. The beer was even better. To me, Big Slide feels like Lake Placid’s mad scientist laboratory. Yes, you had your usual pale ale (very good) and blonde ale (also good) for the folks who want something simple. But then you had things like an double wit, a style I’d never seen before, and a smoked porter that should’ve been a bear to balance out but ended up pretty close to perfect. My favorite was the imperial honey rye, a high-alcohol combo in which the honey took the edge off the rye for a dangerously drinkable beer.”
“This past weekend, I went to Brouwerij West down by the Port of Los Angeles in San Pedro. [...] The brewery was in a massive converted warehouse and had at least a half dozen seriously huge fermenters and a good-sized bottling/kegging operation. The tasting room took up maybe a quarter of the open space, with a bunch of picnic tables put together and some 90s alternative on the speakers. A couple of food trucks provided the nosh needed between flights. As one might assume from the name Brouwerji West specializes in Belgian styles, particularly the French farmhouse style known as saison. I tasted three different saisons, all very good, all different and interesting enough to warrant having three on tap. I was particularly intrigued by a Belgian pale ale called Hello, Nurse!, which really took advantage of the funk and tartness you get from Belgian yeast. But then there was a regular IPA — the hoppy style so ubiquitous on the West Coast — which was…perfectly fine but rather unnecessary. It was a very well crafted IPA, on par with most of them out there, but not on the level of the very best. And if you’re primarily a Belgian-style brewery, why even do a straight-up IPA? Own who you are.”
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