Improve your ability to pick out aromas in a glass of wine with the use of an aroma kit. There are many wine aroma kits available but most cost well above $100; we put this kit together for around $30. The aroma kit uses several common household spices, so you might already have some of the ingredients.

Make Your Own Wine Aroma Kit

The ingredient selection of this kit is designed specifically for red wines.

What You’ll Need

We used dry spices for this kit because they last longer.

Spices Anise

Oregano

Black Peppercorn (Tellicherry, if you can)

Vanilla

Nutmeg

Dill

White Pepper (optional)

Black Cardamom (optional) Other Dried Mushrooms

Dirt

Dried Tobacco (optional)

Cedar Chips (optional)

What to do

Put spices and other materials in jars.

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We found jars at World Market for $1 each and a little bamboo spice jar holder for $8.

How to use a wine aroma kit

There are two methods for using your kit:

Blend with Wine: Blend single aroma kit ingredients into a small portion of wine (in a glass) to understand how aromas interact with the volatile compounds of wine (a.k.a. alcohol)

Blend single aroma kit ingredients into a small portion of wine (in a glass) to understand how aromas interact with the volatile compounds of wine (a.k.a. alcohol) Smell Aromas: Smell an aroma in its jar and then smell a wine. This overloads your senses with the selected aroma and opens up your ability to smell the wine in a different context. By smelling the aroma from the kit first, you effectively remove that aroma from your sense of smell for a short period of time and suddenly you’ll smell different things in the wine that weren’t as obvious before.

Spices need something to volatilize aromas into the air. By crushing, cutting or rubbing spices you can smell them more easily. The best trick is to add the spice into about an ounce of wine in a wine glass. The spice will ‘flavor’ the smell of the wine. This technique works particularly well on spices like anise and green peppercorn. If you don’t want to ruin your wine with spices, just smell them inside the jars.



TIP: Professional tasters usually use a system of taking 2 short sniffs followed by a longer slower sniff. The short sniffs help to ‘prime your nose’ and the longer sniff helps you ‘observe’ the aroma.

Spice Aromas in Red Wine