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WSET Wine Level 3 Questions and Correct Answers $13.79   Add to cart

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WSET Wine Level 3 Questions and Correct Answers

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  • Course
  • WSET level 3
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  • WSET Level 3

What is tartrate stabilization? What is tartrate stabilization? What is tartrate stabilization? What is tartrate stabilization? What is tartrate stabilization? What is tartrate stabilization? What is tartrate stabilization? What is tartrate stabilization? What is tartrate stabilization? Wh...

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  • August 17, 2024
  • 38
  • 2024/2025
  • Exam (elaborations)
  • Questions & answers
  • racking
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  • WSET level 3
  • WSET level 3
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WSET Wine Level 3 Questions and
Correct Answers
racking
✓ ~~~ Gross lees settle at the bottom due to gravity and the clean wine is
slowly and gently pumped into a different vessel.

Requirement for age-able wine
✓ ~~~ sufficient level of tannin, acidity and/or alcohol

What does fining accomplish
✓ ~~~ Clump together wine constituents so they become visible and filterable.
Help ensure wine stability

What are the methods of clarifying a wine?
✓ ~~~ Sedimentation, fining and filtration.

What are the two methods of filtration?
✓ ~~~ Depth Filtration using a thick layer of material and surface filtration using
a very fine sieve.

What is tartrate stabilization?
✓ ~~~ Chill the wine to below 0C for a short period of time so that tartrate
crystals will form and be removed prior to bottling.

What wine is susceptible to yeast or bacteria spoilage?
✓ ~~~ Wine that hasn't undergone MLF, and wine with low to medium alcohol,
low acidity and some residual sugar.

Flushing bottle with CO2 or N can...
✓ ~~~ eliminate O2 and reduce oxidization

What is gross lees
✓ ~~~ dead yeast cells and grape fragments

What is malolactic fermentation?
✓ ~~~ Secondary fermentation that breaks down tart malic acid into softer lactic
acid.

How does MLF affect wine
✓ ~~~ It softens and reduces acidity, creating buttery flavors and producing
CO2.

How can MLF be avoided
✓ ~~~ Storage at cool temperature, the use of SO2 and filtering out the
bacteria.

,What is chaptilization?
✓ ~~~ Adding sugar from sources other than grapes to a wine.

What aromas and flavors does oak provide?
✓ ~~~ Toast, vanilla, smoke and cloves.

Which climate requires more spraying of fungicides
✓ ~~~ Maritime due to the high rainfall during growing season.

How can you cure vine viruses
✓ ~~~ No cure, eradicate by digging up vines and sanitizing the land. Spread
through cuttings or nematodes.

What is a nematode?
✓ ~~~ Microscopic worms that attack the roots of vine, interfering with water
and nutrient uptake. It can also transmit vine viruses.

What is green harvesting?
✓ ~~~ It is a technique to managing yields by removing immature grapes
shortly after veraison.

What is the suitable planting density for very fertile soil with sufficient rainfall?
✓ ~~~ Low density planting using vines with multiple cordons or canes.

What is the suitable planting density for low level of soil nutrients and sufficient
rainfall?
✓ ~~~ High density with pruning to control the number of buds.

What is a spur?
✓ ~~~ Short sections of one-year-old wood that have been cut down to only two
or three buds.

What is a cane
✓ ~~~ Also called Guyot, it is a longer section of one-year-old wood with
between 8-20 buds.

What is vertical shoot positioning?
✓ ~~~ The vine's shoots are trained vertically and tied onto trellis to form a
single narrow canopy. This system keeps the canopy open, well aerated and
shade free.

What is the serving temperature of sweet wines?
✓ ~~~ Well chilled at 6-8C

What is the serving temperature of medium/full-bodied red wines?
✓ ~~~ Room temperature at 15-18C

,What components in food makes a wine taste harder (more astringent, bitter, acidic,
less sweet and fruity)?
✓ ~~~ umami and sweetness

What does salt and acid in food do?
✓ ~~~ Makes a wine taste softer (less astringent, bitter, less acidic, sweeter,
more fruity)?

What is reduction?
✓ ~~~ A wine flaw when a wine doesn't get enough air, volatile sulfur
compounds begin to form. Smells of burnt matches, rotten eggs and old
cabbage.

What is volatile acidity?
✓ ~~~ Caused by various yeasts and bacteria during winemaking and gives a
vinegary taste. Small amounts of VA can add subtle sweet and tangy
balsamic qualities that bring complexity to red fruit notes.

What is Rectified Concentrated Grape Must?
✓ ~~~ RCGM is added during fermentation to increase sugar/alcohol levels.

How do you clarify wine before bottling?
✓ ~~~ Settling, centrifugation, fining and filtration

What is the optimal temperature for white wine fermentation?
✓ ~~~ 12-22C

High volume, inexpensive whites are usually made with what varieties?
✓ ~~~ Chardonnay and Pinot Grigio

What is the most common adjustment made to high-volume, inexpensive whites
grown in warm or hot region?
✓ ~~~ Acidification

Why are some whites fermented at cool temperature?
✓ ~~~ To retain as much primary fruit aromas and flavors as possible.

Characteristics of Sauvignon Blanc
✓ ~~~ Highly aromatic, high acidity, early ripening.

Aroma characteristics of Sauvignon Blanc from New Zealand
✓ ~~~ gooseberry, elderflowers, grapefruit and passionfruit.

Regions known for high quality Sauvignon Blanc
✓ ~~~ Loire Valley (Sancerre & Pouilley Fume);
Marlborough NZ;
Margaret River, West Australia;
Chile;

, South Africa

What is the style of Sauvignon Blanc in Margaret River, West Australia?
✓ ~~~ Blended with Semillon to give a slightly less aromatic but fuller bodied
wine.

What is the style of Sauvignon Blanc in Bordeaux?
✓ ~~~ Fermented and matured partly in oak, and blended with Semillon, to add
richness, bodies and spicy toasty notes.

Why is Riesling a good wine for colder regions?
✓ ~~~ It is very tolerant of cold weather and buds late so avoids spring frost.

The aroma notes of Riesling
✓ ~~~ Green fruits and floral in colder climate, citrus and stone fruit in warmer
climate.

Why is Riesling a good choice for sweet wines?
✓ ~~~ Riesling maintains its acidity levels while accumulating sugar

What are the ways to concentrate grape sugars to make sweet wines?
✓ ~~~ Noble rot, drying grapes on the vine, drying grapes after picking, freezing
grapes.

Name some of the wines made using noble rot:
✓ ~~~ Sauternes, tokaji, beerenauslesen and Trockenbeerenauslesen from
Germany and Alsace

What are the conditions for noble rot?
✓ ~~~ Fully ripen grapes, humid morning mists, sunny dry afternoons.

What are the aromas of wines made from noble rot?
✓ ~~~ Honey, apricot, citrus zest and dried fruits.

What is passerillage?
✓ ~~~ Drying or shriveling on the vine of healthy grapes

What is passito?
✓ ~~~ The drying of grapes for a period of time prior to fermentation

What style of riesling does Alsace specializes in?
✓ ~~~ Dry

Which regions in Australia are known for their riesling?
✓ ~~~ Clare and Eden Valleys, for their bone dry, high acidity rieslings with
aromas of lime.

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