End-of-Year Pre-dinner Blind Tasting at Sherlock’s

Get ready to uncork some fun this Friday! To celebrate your hard work this year, we've got a special treat planned before your end-of-year dinner at Columbia Steak House.
cheers at sherlock's

VTTI Customer Service Team
– Prepare for a Blind Date with Cypriot Rosé!

We’ll be kicking things off at Sherlock’s with a special pre-dinner activity : A blind tasting game featuring some seriously delicious Cypriot rosés.

Here’s what you need to know:

The Challenge: Put your senses to the test! You’ll be presented with a glass of rosé wine of unknown origin (the “mystery wine”). Then, you’ll taste four additional wines, one of which is identical to the mystery wine.

Your Mission: Using your taste buds, smell, and any acquired wine knowledge, identify the imposter! Discuss your observations with your teammates, share insights, and make those educated guesses.

The Reward: Bragging rights and a deeper appreciation for the unique flavors Cypriot rosés have to offer!

what's in it

Tips for Tasting Success:

  • Don’t worry if you’re not a wine expert! Just come with an open mind and a sense of adventure.
  • Pay attention to the aromas and flavors. Swirl, sniff, and savor each sip.
  • Discuss your findings with your teammates. Two heads are better than one!

A Little Rosé 101:

So, what’s up with rosé? It’s this awesome type of wine that gets its color from the grape skins, but not enough to be a red wine. Fun fact: it might actually be the oldest type of wine since it’s pretty simple to make using the skin contact method. The color can really vary, going from a light “onion skin” orange to a bold purple, depending on the grapes and how it’s made.

There are three main ways to make rosé: skin contact, saignée, and blending. Rosé can be made from a bunch of different grapes and shows up in wine regions all over the world.

If the plan is to make rosé as the main event, it’s usually done with the skin contact method. You crush black-skinned grapes and let the skins hang out with the juice for a little while, usually two to twenty hours. After that, the grape juice gets pressed, and the skins are tossed out, unlike red wine where they hang around for the fermentation. The longer the skins are chilling in the juice, the deeper the color gets in the wine.

If a winemaker wants a bit more tannin and color in their red wine, they might sneak out some of the pink juice early using the Saignée method (means “bleeding” in French). This process concentrates the red wine left in the vats since the juice volume decreases, making it richer. And that pink juice? It gets fermented on its own to create some nice rosé.

Mixing red wine into white wine to get that pretty color isn’t common and was usually a no-go in many wine-growing regions, especially in France, where it’s pretty much against the rules, except for Champagne. 

Get ready to tantalize your taste buds!
See you on Friday, VTTI Customer Service Team!

For a deeper dive into the Blind Tasting Game format, check out this link:

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