Saturday, December 22, 2007

Wine Tasting Kits and Caboodles

Wine tasting may seem like something that is on special reserve, geared only for those who are expert wine drinkers. Intent on discovering fruits of a winery's labor, these connoisseurs set out to serve as judges and juries of the bottled world, as if deciding the fate of a wine that stands trial, accused of being bad. But, however expert-like wine tasting may seem, it's not just for those who are experts, connoisseurs, or even seasoned drinkers; wine tasting is also for beginners. Even for those of you who view wine as a stranger, too intimidated to approach it in a bar, wine tasting is a necessary and helpful practice.

Wine tasting serves many purposes. First of all, it gives you the ability to find out what kind of wine you truly enjoy, helping you decide what wine you should order at restaurants and store in the cellar. Wine tasting also exposes you to a variety of types, educating you on how to detect differences. Without it, you may have no chance at ever determining one wine from another, ultimately forcing yourself to order the entire wine list instead of just a specific glass or bottle.

While many cities have wine tasting events, with some cities even offering classes on how to properly taste wine, some people, particularly the wine novice, may prefer to lose their wine tasting virginity in a more private venue, such as their own home. For those of you with which this preference fits, a wine tasting kit is a suitable purchase.

Wine Tasting Kits

Wine tasting kits bring the concept of a large wine tasting venue to the comfort of your home, allowing you to enjoy each sip in your favorite chair, perhaps watching Golden Girls in between vintages, nodding in appreciation to both your wine and Sophia's witty rapport. Because it removes the presence of wine vendors and wine experts from the equation, wine tasting kits provide the ability to taste wine without the fear of doing it incorrectly.

Wine tasting kits can greatly range in price and in what they include. While some come with everything you could possibly need, stopping just short of packaging a vineyard in bubble wrap, others don't include everything, with some not including the wine. Wine tasting kits that may be geared towards teaching people to learn the differences in smell may include aroma strips, where as those geared towards party games may include a wine trivia book. Similarly, some wine tasting kits are geared for a solo taster, while other wine tasting kits come with six or eight glasses, aimed at those who want to share the wine tasting experience with a few close friends.

Wine tasting kits may also not be exactly what they sound like. Some books that discuss wine tasting call themselves wine tasting kits and course outlines, that provide a lesson plan on tasting, also call themselves wine tasting kits. While these can be just as helpful as the actual wine tasting kit itself, be sure you are purchasing exactly what you seek.

Blind Wine Tasting Kits

Whether it's romance you're sharing with another person, or romance you're sharing with a bottle of wine, love is always blind, with no preconceived notions or stereotypes affecting affection. This idea applies to all sorts of categories of wine, particularly the tasting of it.

Blind wine tasting, while it may sound like a game where you wear a blindfold and pin a wine opener on a bottle of Pinot Noir, is the concept of tasting wine without knowing anything about it: without knowing where it's from, what year it was made, or what it does for fun. Because people often have previously established judgments, knowing certain things about wine can alter opinions. Blind tasting, however, requires the taster to be as objective as possible, making them as honest as possible in the process. This gives you the greatest chance of finding wine that you truly like.

Blind wine tasting kits are essentially the same as wine tasting kits, only you don't know what type of wine you are tasting. These kits typically come with bottles encased in cloth, blocking you from viewing the wine's information. Only after the wine has been tasted and rated, should its identity be revealed.

Virtual Wine Tasting Kits

The virtual world has transcended the categories of virtually every product in existence including wine tasting kits. Virtual wine tasting kits are similar to video lessons or books on tape, only they involve a DVD player or a computer. They are relatively easy to follow. Many come with a few bottles of wine as well as a CD Rom or a DVD where your very own wine connoisseur guides you through the world of wine. The CD Rom or DVD will instruct you how to assess the quality of the wine, determine if it needs to be aged or if it is presently suitable for drinking, and detect certain odors and flavors of the wine.

Wine tasting kits can be both fun and beneficial for any wine drinker. Most are extremely simple to use and easily encourage the culture and art of determining one wine from another: they provide an invaluable wine education. However, because wine tasting does involve alcohol, it's important not to make portions too big (or use a spittoon). Drinking too much wine can make you drunk, leaving you to have both an affinity for all types of wine and an unyielding desire for bacon.

Jennifer Jordan is the senior editor at http://www.savoreachglass.com. With a vast knowledge of wine etiquette, she writes articles on everything from how to hold a glass of wine to how to hold your hair back after too many glasses. Ultimately, she writes her articles with the intention that readers will remember wine is fun and each glass of anything fun should always be savored.psp game downloads
wholesale psp games
psp reviews
downloads for psp
psp downgrader
psp mods
psp game downloads
psp forums
free psp download
psp codes
psp internet
downloadable psp games
psp prices
psp music downloads
psp video converter

A Profitable Web 2.0 Project Developed In 24 Hours?

It took seven months to get the One Million Masterpiece charity project online. The site is complex and needed the development time, but in the last few days Ive had a yearning to see if I can still turn around a project in 24 hours. Back in the early days of the Internet boom Id sit in my bedroom and knock out html websites all night long, but almost ten years on, can it still be done in a time where profitability and interactivity are the key measures?

So, its 7am and Ive got a plan. The new pressures I face in life (work responsibilities, family etc) have been dealt with and I have a clear 24 hours ahead of me. An idea for a site has been kicking round in my head ever since I sold a site last year. This site was a very specialist software comparison site that generated referral commissions and Adsense income. It was an excellent earner and Ive wanted to recreate that success, but on a larger scale.

So last year I bought the domain http://www.shoutdown.net with the intention of building a software comparison style project. I want the site to be in the informal blog style, where the posts are product summaries (written by me), and the comments would be reviews submitted by other people. Id also throw in a rating system, and way of attaching news releases or other relevant pages to each product post, plus link related posts (for example different versions of the same software).

So the idea is there, its 7:30am and my first job is to select some mp3s to get me through to lunch. Here goes

08.00
By the time Ive chosen my music, switched off my Google desktop bar and responded to essential email its already 8am crap. So, first job is drawing out a schematic of the database that will power my site. What information do I want to keep and how will I organise it? Im having five database tables. For ease Im calling them level1, level2, level3 etc because I see them as levels of information about each software product the top being category information and the bottom being the reviews and ratings.

09:15
Took me quite a while to get the structure clear, but now Im sketching out the homepage on paper. Ive looked at a few blogs that I like and have basically copied their layout for ease. Ive also worked out the sizing of my main columns and rows and know the positions of the adverts, main blog posts and navigation. I still like to work on paper at this stage Im an artist at heart!

09:55
OK lets get on the computer. Ive fired up Paint Shop Pro and my first job is to work out a colour pallet. I want three colours, so I blob different combinations on a blank white image until I get the right combination orange, purple and grey. I then make a note of the hex codes for each colour on a post-it this will save LOADS of time later. While Im in PSP Im going to mock up a logo as I already know the size of image I need from my plan. Actually I really like the logo so it will probably be permanent.

10:21
Time to start on the site. Im using a single html page at the moment with a linked css file. Using some basic tables and css Ive laid out the top bar, the post area and two columns (one for ads and one for navigation). Im sticking to a tried and tested blog layout.

I always use Dreamweaver, but always hand code. Why use Dreamweaver then? Well, I find the preview quite accurate, but other than that I have no idea just habit.

11:38
Ive just finished the main site layout, including place holding text that will eventually be dynamic. Ive left space for some ads on the site, so Ive justed logged in to Adsense to generate the code. All I need to do is use the colours on my post-it to get them fitting in nicely. Ill also take a look round for some other nice banners in my affiliate accounts.

12:43
That took longer than planned, time for lunch

13:17
OK time to fill up my database with some data, then I can start writing the php that will populate the pages. Im going to sign up for a few software affiliate accounts and write some sample reviews on the software. At the moment I havent got time to write really good reviews, but in time I intend to fully try each title and write some good stuff (positive and negative). For now Ill be brief.

15:20
Right, lets get back to the site. Im going to sort out the navigation side bars first, and then Ill split my single page up.

16:45
This isnt working. Ive got a very limited knowledge of php so Im having trouble dynamically generating category headings and software lists dynamically. Its taking too long to sort out so for now Im going to simply print a list of all software titles in the database. Ill make up for it by also providing a list of software categories, plus a list of the most reviewed software.

16:58
Im going to split up my single html page now into a header, body, nav and footer, and use a php include to pull the pages together. In total I will only need three main template pages for the content of this site the homepage, a category page and a product page.

18:24
Ive finished the layout of the three pages, including all the code that pulls info from the database. Everythings working pretty well and Im please with the simplicity. My next job is to create an rss feed of the posts and reviews, but first I need some DINNER!

20:04
After some pasta and tv Im ready for this rss feed. Its pretty easy to create a php page that will pull the necessary code and place it in the rss 2.0 layout. Once Im done Ill just save the php file as xml and ensure that my .htaccess file remembers to parse xml files for php code.

21:36
I checked that the rss feed was valid using a standard validator. It took a little time to sort out the date formatting to be honest.

21:57
Ive been developing using Firefox to test the layout, but I just checked the site in IE and noticed the background colour was dodgy. It was a css error fixed.

22:15
OK back to content. The reviews at the moment are boring so Im going to add some images and expand them a little. Im also going to add some reviews that Ive been collecting over the last few months. The good thing about buying the domain and posting up a test website for six months is that the search engines have already crawled the site, and hopefully will help me avoid the Google sandbox.

02:30
Im absolutely knackered. Ive just spent the last few hours trying to get the navigation system working but with no luck. The problem is that Im trying to dynamically generate an information tree (apparently thats what its called after much research) but I just cant get it working. Im giving up.

04:49
OK, Ive just created a rating system which will only accept one software vote per IP address. Seems a bit buggy but I really really tired and cant be bothered to go through it again now.

So whats left to do? I need to create forms to input reviews, news and bookmarks but Im just too tired to continue. So much for 24 hours, but actually Im really pleased with the result. On the surface the site looks like any other blog, and you might question why I decided to hand code the entire thing. Well, I have some ideas for some advanced functions, but Ill only be able to implement them if I know the site inside out. Plus I just like the challenge.

I wont have time to work on the site all week, but Im already planning my next 24 hour session marketing. Ill be sure to keep you updated on that, and how the site is doing generally!

Paul Fisher is an entrepreneur whose ventures include http://theonemillionmasterpiece.com arts project, a restaurant chain and several successful websites. View his personal blog at http://www.thepaulfisherblog.blogspot.com.psp software
music for psp
psp codes
psp com
psp wifi
psp movie creator
psp firmware
downloads for psp
psp game saves
buy psp
cheap psp games
cheap psp games
free psp
psp movie downloads
psp game download