Generally the language of wine appreciation passes me by. A hint of strawberriesburnt corksquashed bananasrotting watermelons….sodden tobacco. Clearly wine journalists, to justify their existence, have to offer more than simply rather nice, a super wine, jolly good, but the attempt at some kind of vocabulary of taste, as though these were readily verifiable descriptions, always struck me as optimistic at best and absurdly pretentious at worst. And it's spread to other drinks now – whisky, rum, brandy. As with so much else, I blame the French.

At least you know what they're getting at, if it is all a bit de trop. But at the Whisky Exchange – where you can buy a bottle of 1937 Glenfiddich for £50,000.38 – the producer's tasting notes for Ron Zacapa Centenario Sistema Solera 23 (via), a world-beating rum, say this:

Body:  Dense, with marvellous complexities of aroma and flavour; thick legs that fall slowly.

I can't even begin to understand what that's supposed to mean.

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6 responses to “Legs Falling Slowly”

  1. DaninVan Avatar
    DaninVan

    Simple really. The author was merely describing his physical condition after knocking back a bottle…

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  2. Retardo Avatar

    IIRC “legs” are “the streaks that form on a wine glass when the wine is swirled”, according to the first hit for “wine legs” on googogogoo.

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  3. Mick H Avatar
    Mick H

    That makes sense, actually. Thanks.

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  4. Dom Avatar
    Dom

    About the Glenfiddich — why is there 38 (cents?) tacked on to the price? They couldn’t round down?

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  5. Mick H Avatar
    Mick H

    38 pence! Yes I thought that was amusing.

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  6. DaninVan Avatar
    DaninVan

    That usually happens when you use a multiplier, eg 7% commission or a tax of some sort. They can’t just drop the odd bits because the books won’t balance. Think of your bank account and the odd bits that show up there.

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