Wine With Jimmy

Wine With Jimmy

Hi there!
Welcome to the Wine With Jimmy KZread channel. My name is Jimmy Smith, and I am a wine educator based in London, United Kingdom. As a WSET tutor, I know that the material in these courses can be quite daunting to master for the final exam. With this in mind, I've created my KZread channel to help wine students successfully achieve their qualifications as well as provide guidance on many different aspects of wine generally - all in a way that is approachable and easy to understand.
Subscribe to this channel for new educational wine videos every week!
You can also find a comprehensive suite of WSET revision resources that I've created at www.e-learningwine.com which includes multiple choice questions, flashcards and other useful revision templates and exercises (as well as more educational videos!)
Thank you for visiting, and if you ever find yourself in London, UK, I hope you can join me for a class, a glass (or a bottle!).
- Jimmy

What is Mousiness in Wine?

What is Mousiness in Wine?

The Wine Regions of Romagna

The Wine Regions of Romagna

Zinfandel for WSET Level 3

Zinfandel for WSET Level 3

The Wines of Romagna

The Wines of Romagna

Пікірлер

  • @alexanderzabavnikov6707
    @alexanderzabavnikov670748 минут бұрын

    Молодец - Джими! Это всё хорошо! Вино. Болгари! Ну, что там по поводу изминения климата на Земле?

  • @tonywong-mz7dk
    @tonywong-mz7dk20 сағат бұрын

    Thanks for summary

  • @sagarrijal2055
    @sagarrijal2055Күн бұрын

    Thank u Subscriber from Nepal

  • @chrismurphy6728
    @chrismurphy6728Күн бұрын

    I appreciate the history on NY State wine. I live on Long Island but am partial to Finger Lake rieslings. I've done tastings at Dr. Konstantin Frank's twice (great room, great view!), and look forward to checking out others. My favorite though is the Wagner semi-dry. I hear the best red from NY State is cabernet franc but haven't been overly impressed with any yet. Love some recommendations from your followers.

  • @claudiagalindog
    @claudiagalindog3 күн бұрын

    Excelente 👌 👏👏💯💯🍷🍷🌟🌟🙏🙏

  • @sheralschowe
    @sheralschowe5 күн бұрын

    Hello Jimmy!

  • @Pinot22
    @Pinot226 күн бұрын

    Hawkes Bay is the 12th Great Wine Capital of the World.......Te Awanga is pronounced "Tee-ah-WONG-ah"

  • @WineWithJimmy
    @WineWithJimmy6 күн бұрын

    Ah - thank you so much!

  • @ghostofdota
    @ghostofdota6 күн бұрын

    Thank you, excellent video :)

  • @jlarrify
    @jlarrify7 күн бұрын

    Been watching your videos and they have been very helpful in nurturing a possible future career in the wine world. Is your advanced and extra material available on your website. Or maybe I will find it clicking around, watching more of your content. Thank you!

  • @WineWithJimmy
    @WineWithJimmy6 күн бұрын

    Thank you! Yes - there is more material available here: www.winewithjimmy.com/wine-with-jimmy-wset-revision-courses. You are also welcome to click around all of the other free content on this channel. Enjoy! :)

  • @jlarrify
    @jlarrify5 күн бұрын

    Thanks!

  • @UncleBillyZw
    @UncleBillyZw7 күн бұрын

    These videos helps a lot ,thanks Jimmy

  • @katyapourswine
    @katyapourswine10 күн бұрын

    I am selling low interv wine and you can t imagine how many ppl can t taste it or find it as a nice addition to the wine. As for me, I can taste it, but it doesn t bother me at all.

  • @WineWithJimmy
    @WineWithJimmy9 күн бұрын

    Interesting that it doesn't bother you and those who can't taste it at all are blessed. For me it results in a sink pour.

  • @sbyooon
    @sbyooon11 күн бұрын

    Interesting! 😮 As an East Asian, personally I'm more accustomed to the European descriptors. I have never seen papayas sold in my country and never tasted one in my 30 odd life. 😅 Also we often put ginseng in chicken soup so we're pretty familiar with the flavor but ginseng is more like 'earth+mint' than green pepper. Lastly, pineapple is pineapple, strawberry is strawberry and butter is butter in East Asia, too, so I have't seen anybody confused with the descriptors. Instead, I've often seen people describe VA or certain Pinot Noir characteristics as soy sauce, and methoxypyrazine in Cab Sauv as gochujang (Korean red pepper paste). My personal favorite decriptor for Sauv Blanc is gyeolmyeongja (Korean cassia seeds.) which corresponds to gooseberry or cat-pee-like flavor.

  • @WineWithJimmy
    @WineWithJimmy8 күн бұрын

    Thanks for your feedback. I love these learning about these different flavour comparisons.

  • @francismarcelvos5831
    @francismarcelvos583114 күн бұрын

    As a gardener and start up grape grower, I find it very interesting to hear about the pitfalls of winegrowers. I bought three uprooted mature Mourvedre vines from Southern Europe. It seems that Mourvedre already existed 500 BC in Lebanon and the Phoenicians brought it to Southern Spain where it was cultivated by monks. Israel still has many wild grapevarieties, that survived the Arabic conquest. I have made amazing wines from those wild vines. I also made wine from abandoned vineyards close to Ramat Motza in the Judean hills, probably Sauvignon Blanc white grapes. I now live close to the German border in Salland. I hope to make wine again, having learned lots of reasons why winegrowers failed to innovate vinegrowing. Australia reinvented its wine industry and makes premium vines. Northern Europe chooses non traditional grape varietals and succeeds in capturing a niche market. Buying a Dutch wine is still very special. Small is beautiful. Perhaps the biggest issue with the wine industry is thinking that more is better. I tasted too many low quality wines, heard too many stories about wine maffia in Southern Europe and know how Europe keeps financing the European wine industry. Climate change is here to stay. Western Europe and Northern Europe will get the climate of Southern Europe of last century. Jimmy, you focus too much on the big and the famous. In twenty years from now, I expect the wine industry to be totally changed. You are in England. Focus more on Northern and Western Europe, not on countries that are too hot for grapes to grow.

  • @WineWithJimmy
    @WineWithJimmy13 күн бұрын

    Thank you for sharing your insights and experiences. It's always fascinating to hear from fellow enthusiasts and growers. Regarding the focus of my videos (this one included), they follow the WSET (Wine & Spirit Education Trust) courses, which is why we often concentrate on certain countries and regions. About Mourvèdre, while grape cultivation in Lebanon dates back to ancient times, the specific link to Mourvèdre around 500 BC isn't well-documented. But as you say the Phoenicians did spread viticulture throughout the Mediterranean, which likely brought Mourvèdre (known as Monastrell) to Southern Spain. Also, I’ve covered various regions in my videos, including places like Georgia which has a rich wine heritage and unique traditions, and the cooler states of North America and here in the UK . These videos aim to show the diversity within the wine world. Your points on wild grape varieties in Israel and climate change are really interesting. It's exciting to see how regions like Northern Europe are adapting with non-traditional grape varieties and finding success. Thanks again for your comment! I hope you continue to enjoy and find value in the videos.

  • @tonywong-mz7dk
    @tonywong-mz7dk15 күн бұрын

    Great ! Thanks for the class .

  • @WineWithJimmy
    @WineWithJimmy14 күн бұрын

    You're welcome. Cheers!

  • @bluejesper
    @bluejesper18 күн бұрын

    Brilliant as usual Jimmy! Thanks!

  • @WineWithJimmy
    @WineWithJimmy18 күн бұрын

    Cheers!

  • @Stephan-sy3jm
    @Stephan-sy3jm19 күн бұрын

    Thanks for finalising this Series. Some time ago you started to publish a 17 Parts series of Georgia. So far, only 12 parts are published on KZread, are you planning to continue. When?

  • @artoftasting
    @artoftasting19 күн бұрын

    Thanks for sharing your insights Jimmy! Regarding the claim about mousiness disappearing (at 22:30), something similar happens with pure chemicals related to mousiness. In other words, when ATHP is synthesised in a laboratory, it polymerises: multiple ATHP molecules reacts with each other to form flavourless compounds. Even when ATHP is dissolved in alcohol and kept in the freezer, it will disappear within about three months. I don't know if ATHP behaves in the same way in wine, but the compounds reacting with each other could potentially explain why mousiness in wine disappears

  • @WineWithJimmy
    @WineWithJimmy13 күн бұрын

    It's an interesting one. I would like to see more studies on this phenomenon.

  • @0u812_
    @0u812_19 күн бұрын

    Thank you for posting this. It's very helpful in getting my bearings of the area as I plan to visit soon - but Selbach Oster's vineyard, which you didn't mention, is top on my list :)

  • @WineWithJimmy
    @WineWithJimmy18 күн бұрын

    You're very welcome! Have a great visit :)

  • @stevehutton7833
    @stevehutton783320 күн бұрын

    Do you need to know about the GDOs for germany for level 2?

  • @WineWithJimmy
    @WineWithJimmy18 күн бұрын

    Hi! Here is a link to the course specification for Level 2 so you can see what you can be tested on: www.wsetglobal.com/media/6942/wset_l2wines_specification_en_may2019.pdf The Level 2 materials are organised around varieties rather than countries/regions. For riesling, Mosel, Rheingau and Pfalz are the German GIs noted. Regionally important labelling terms indicating style and quality of wines made from the principal grape varieties are also set out: Prädikatswein, Kabinett, Spätlese, Auslese, Beerenauslese (BA), Trockenbeerenauslese (TBA), Eiswein, Trocken, Halbtrocken. All of the above can be examined at Level 2.

  • @juanmanuelmunozhernandez7032
    @juanmanuelmunozhernandez703220 күн бұрын

    I've not done chemistry in a while, but my first guess about why it can disappear with time in bottle could be that those different compounds can get to a higher oxidation state than the one that causes the unpleasant aroma, so the mousiness is a temporary stay over a longer journey towards chemical stability.

  • @WineWithJimmy
    @WineWithJimmy13 күн бұрын

    I hope this is the case. But I have tasted some older wines which show it so I'm guessing this is multi faceted chemical problem!

  • @Ruirspirul
    @Ruirspirul12 күн бұрын

    Mouse never actually goes away, its just people confuse post malolactic fermentation protein instability with Mouse. it essentially has, same yeasty, wet doughy notes on the aftertaste but it gets stabilized in couple of months and thats when people think Mouse has gone away.

  • @saleemashraf6250
    @saleemashraf625020 күн бұрын

    A ghost in the wine😅

  • @Allan-cl8ie
    @Allan-cl8ie20 күн бұрын

    This is interesting as I can usually detected a corked or somewhat corked wine, but I have also done tastings where it actually appeared to blow off and in some cases became more pronounced with aeration. Trying to distinguish between the two, I love fino sherry which is quite unusual for this side of the pond. I love amontillado styles as well depending what I have with it, but it can have a somewhat unpleasant long finish which would otherwise be good in a table wine. Where I can have more issues is with Madeira which I like for other than cooking which is terribly Un-American. Here I can have an aftertaste which I have never quite understood. I was wondering if this could be mousiness in the oxidative development of some of these fortified wines? Is this just my palate? I am sure you know peoples' tastes usually go in way or another when it comes to things like asparagus and cilantro so maybe it is just my personal taste here as well. Your thoughts kind Sir.

  • @JustifiedJesus
    @JustifiedJesus20 күн бұрын

    This resonates. There are a handful of compounds I have found in a variety of fermented beverages that register on my palate as “mouse adjacent.” One of them is that musty yeasty quality in sherry, one is a almost cheesy over stirred lees (think muscadet) and the other is the “water cracker/biscuit” note in some pilsners. The real lightbulb for me was paying extra attention to when the mouse hits and how intense it is. And does it impact my next sip in a negative way and detract from the harmony in the wine. To test, first I would try some “local pickled thing” and see if there is any THP, so you can really isolate when and where on your palate. Then I would seek out mousy wines at your local natural shop. Then maybe a Brett IPA to differentiate barnyard funk and phenolics from the wheaty grossness.

  • @wyattalexander4041
    @wyattalexander404120 күн бұрын

    Great topic !!

  • @WineWithJimmy
    @WineWithJimmy20 күн бұрын

    Thanks!

  • @MICHELANGELO_JR.
    @MICHELANGELO_JR.21 күн бұрын

    You tellin’ me a mouse put his whole taint in this? 🥴

  • @WineWithJimmy
    @WineWithJimmy21 күн бұрын

    hahaha!

  • @wyattalexander4041
    @wyattalexander404120 күн бұрын

    Aayyyyy yooooo

  • @carlcadregari7768
    @carlcadregari776821 күн бұрын

    Love the geeky posts. Thank you!!

  • @WineWithJimmy
    @WineWithJimmy20 күн бұрын

    Glad you like them! Cheers!

  • @keithpoolehomecoffeeroasti489
    @keithpoolehomecoffeeroasti48923 күн бұрын

    At about 14:00 you explain how at around 2-2.5% alcohol, free run juice and eventually pressed juice are combined and yeast is added to finish the fermentation. Is the vat unsealed and oxygen added at this point, or does it remain oxygen free throughout?

  • @WineWithJimmy
    @WineWithJimmy20 күн бұрын

    Hi! these wines will be handled in a protective way throughout the process to prevent unwanted oxidation. To this end, some producers will press when the initial fermentation activity is still occurring (and some CO2 is still being produced).

  • @MrJcalvino
    @MrJcalvino26 күн бұрын

    In NZ they early pick some lots and late pick others and mix them.

  • @WineWithJimmy
    @WineWithJimmy20 күн бұрын

    True! Thanks for sharing that morsel. Have you worked out there?

  • @MrJcalvino
    @MrJcalvino20 күн бұрын

    @@WineWithJimmy No haha I’m just regurgitating what I learned in my recent WSET2

  • @MrRunezzo
    @MrRunezzo26 күн бұрын

    I am walking the Deutsche Weinstrasse in two weeks. This is a route through pfalz. We Call it the wine camino :) Any good tips on wineries to visit, places to stay and/or eat?

  • @DzingiraIrene
    @DzingiraIrene28 күн бұрын

    Thank you

  • @greenwood130
    @greenwood13028 күн бұрын

    I love the Sangiovese from this region. I had the 2015 Chiara Condello Le Lucciole. I believe it was her first vintage of this bottle. It t was fantastic, I regret only buying one bottle

  • @WineWithJimmy
    @WineWithJimmy27 күн бұрын

    Thanks for sharing! Wine lovers regret is always painful!

  • @zekininadresi
    @zekininadresi29 күн бұрын

    Hey Jimmy, Can you recommend a resource to read more about how PH value of the soil may change the acidity preferably a bit more technically?

  • @WineWithJimmy
    @WineWithJimmy20 күн бұрын

    Yes! There are some interesting explanations and discussions here: tablascreek.typepad.com/tablas/2020/06/why-calcareous-soils-matter-for-vineyards-and-wine-grapes.html www.fao.org/soils-portal/soil-management/management-of-some-problem-soils/calcareous-soils/en/ www.apuwinery.com/post/more-about-our-soils

  • @jamesportoraro8248
    @jamesportoraro824829 күн бұрын

    You do amazing work - keep it up!

  • @WineWithJimmy
    @WineWithJimmy20 күн бұрын

    Thank you! Will do!

  • @zebra20111
    @zebra20111Ай бұрын

    Great video thank you - curious as to what the outcome was with the Moët & Chandon in your parents garage ?

  • @rodrigosanchez6245
    @rodrigosanchez6245Ай бұрын

    Even living in France, this is expensive but very expressive and cheerful wine.Cheers!

  • @JMYaden
    @JMYadenАй бұрын

    This is VERY useful, thank you for sharing your knowledge!

  • @WineWithJimmy
    @WineWithJimmyАй бұрын

    Happy to help! Cheers!

  • @TheCodbutt
    @TheCodbuttАй бұрын

    Drank lots of home-made when I was there in 1999. Fantastic - no hangover, no matter how much I put down. Mukuzani is my favourite. Shame there isn't more in the shops at a sensible price.

  • @jsjs3570
    @jsjs3570Ай бұрын

    Part of my family lives there. A red 'Karl Pfaffmann' always tickles my tastebuds in a very satisfactory way. Good video, thanks.

  • @WineWithJimmy
    @WineWithJimmyАй бұрын

    Glad you enjoyed it. Thanks for the tip. It's always great to get recommendations.

  • @EmmaChen-dj7zv
    @EmmaChen-dj7zvАй бұрын

    It's very useful and knowledgeable for exam preparation, thank you very much.

  • @WineWithJimmy
    @WineWithJimmyАй бұрын

    You are most welcome. Good luck with your exams!

  • @alexanderzabavnikov6707
    @alexanderzabavnikov6707Ай бұрын

    Jimmy ты лучший ведущий кпнала про вино🤘

  • @WineWithJimmy
    @WineWithJimmyАй бұрын

    Glad you enjoyed the video!

  • @bluejesper
    @bluejesperАй бұрын

    Looooove these videos on grape varietals. Well structured and insightful. Thank you Jimmy!

  • @WineWithJimmy
    @WineWithJimmyАй бұрын

    Glad you like them! We've got a few more coming over the next week or two

  • @Allan-cl8ie
    @Allan-cl8ieАй бұрын

    You sounded quite excited about these wines, Jimmy.

  • @WineWithJimmy
    @WineWithJimmyАй бұрын

    It's the excitement of wine. There are always new wines to discover and enjoy.

  • @Stephan-sy3jm
    @Stephan-sy3jmАй бұрын

    Is this a Series for WSET Level4 ?

  • @WineWithJimmy
    @WineWithJimmyАй бұрын

    Hello - it is not a series for L4, but rather an in-depth view of Romagna for all, but would be very useful for people studying Wine Scholar Guild or Master of Wine certifications

  • @paultorbert6929
    @paultorbert6929Ай бұрын

    Love all Italian wines 💛🍾🍷

  • @nielsvanlaatum
    @nielsvanlaatumАй бұрын

    Nice to have met you there, Jimmy!

  • @nikij9276
    @nikij9276Ай бұрын

    Wonderful…. Have you had time to visit Modena? Any Lambrusco?

  • @Psilocinoid
    @PsilocinoidАй бұрын

    I'm currently growing a Rkatsiteli vine in the south of the US and plan on making wine with the results.

  • @WineWithJimmy
    @WineWithJimmyАй бұрын

    Amazing! Let me know how it goes!

  • @sanjaypatelmd4669
    @sanjaypatelmd4669Ай бұрын

    How can I sign up for your detailed videos for WSET 3

  • @WineWithJimmy
    @WineWithJimmyАй бұрын

    Hi! You can find a list of all our courses here: www.winewithjimmy.com/

  • @georgesomapa7539
    @georgesomapa7539Ай бұрын

    Excellent indeed

  • @kumarpaudel7348
    @kumarpaudel7348Ай бұрын

  • @katieandflintnelson1491
    @katieandflintnelson1491Ай бұрын

    Jimmy, I had the exam for Level 4 today. This video helped me so much in explaining the climate around the Finger Lakes. You are a great teacher. Thank you.

  • @WineWithJimmy
    @WineWithJimmyАй бұрын

    Congratulations on sitting the exam :) and thanks for your very kind words. Cheers!