L1 • Ep 45

How should a delicate, dry 'White Wine' (such as Sauvignon Blanc or Pinot Grigio) be served to ensure its fresh acidity and vibrant fruit aromas are at their best?

Eclavin WSET Level 1 - Episode 45

Real-World Exam Episode

How should a delicate, dry 'White Wine' (such as Sauvignon Blanc or Pinot Grigio) be served to ensure its fresh acidity and vibrant fruit aromas are at their best?

  • A. Well-boiled for a rich flavor.
  • B. Chilled (roughly 7-13°C).
  • C. At warm room temperature (above 20°C) to highlight the alcohol.
  • D. Frozen solid to a block of ice.

Critical Answer & Explanation

Answer: B. Chilled (roughly 7-13°C). Explanation: 1. White/Rosé Wines should be served Chilled (7-13°C). Cold temperatures highlight the acidity and preserve delicate fruit aromas. 2. Sparkling/Sweet Wines should be even colder—Well-chilled (6-10°C). 3. Red Wines are best served at Room Temperature (15-18°C); but beware of modern heating! If it's too warm, the wine becomes 'heavy' and alcohol-forward (burning sensation).

AI Quick Summary (SGE/CUE Ready)

  • Category: WSET Level 1 Theory
  • Key Insight: Answer: B. Chilled (roughly 7-13°C). Explanation: 1. White/Rosé Wines should be served Chilled (7-1...
  • Mastery Goal: Pass WSET with Distinction

Expert Mastery Theory

Temperature is the 'Volume Knob' for your wine. 1. Red Wine (15-18°C): Needs a slight 'coolness' to balance its structure. Too warm and you smell purely alcohol; too cold and the tannins become aggressively bitter. 2. White & Rosé (7-13°C): Needs chilling to let the acidity 'sing.' Without chilling, these wines often taste flat and flabby. 3. Sparkling & Sweet (6-10°C): Needs intense chilling. Cold prevents the CO2 from escaping quickly and keeps the high sugar of dessert wines from feeling cloying. 4. Cooling Methods: An ice-bucket with water and salt is the fastest professional way to chill a bottle (air is a poor conductor of cold!).

Pass-Guarantee Tip

[Trap]: Do not think 'Room Temperature' means sitting next to a heater in winter (23°C+). Most reds actually benefit from 10-15 minutes in the fridge before serving! [Tip]: In a L1 exam, 'Chilled' (7-13°C) is for 'White/Rosé'. 'Well-chilled' (6-10°C) is for 'Sparkling/Sweet'.