Many students and fellow Master Sommeliers (including me) consider the tasting exam to be by far the most challenging of the three segments of the overall examination. With that I’ve coached an untold number of students taking the tasting exams at both the Advanced and Master’s level over the years. Here’s a summary of advice and suggestions I’ve commonly given to those preparing for the exams. I hope you’ll find it useful.
Cheers!
Using the grid:
Sight:
Nose:
Palate:
Conclusion:
Practicing tasting: associative memory and rehearsal
It goes without saying that any student must practice individually and also be part of a tasting group to be successful in the tasting exams. Both are invaluable and irreplaceable. However, after many years of coaching a lot of students I’ve come to believe that associative rehearsal, especially for those experienced students taking the Master’s Exam, can be just as useful as physically tasting wine. That’s simply because once a student gets beyond the Advanced Exam odds are they’ve tasted a great deal of wine and have a considerable, and sometimes remarkable, database of memories from previous wines.
For these students—and all students for that matter—the exam is all about memory, specifically olfactory and palate memory. Improving memory does not require having a glass of wine in hand. I strongly believe that someone at the Master’s Exam level needs to be able to mentally call up the complete experience of a classic wine—as in how it looks, smells, tastes and feels on the palate—almost on command.
With that I recommend students preparing for an exam regularly make time to mentally mock up a flight of six classic wines in an exam-type setting (again, all of this in terms of visualization) and then talk through the wines out loud using the MS grid just like they would during an examination. During this rehearsal the student needs to remember and experience each wine as completely and intensely as possible; seeing the wine clearly in their mind’s eye, smelling it completely and accurately, tasting it fully and noting the flavors and structural elements accurately, and then concluding the wine perfectly while feeling really confident.
Practicing tasting using associative rehearsal accomplishes several things simultaneously: it connects one to their previous memories of various specific components found in wine as well as their overall impressions and memories of classic wines as a package of sight, smell and taste; it also builds recognition in terms of describing a wine perfectly through auditory cognition and recognition. Finally, practicing talking through wines out loud helps to build an inner comfort zone for students in terms of having confidence using the language of the grid and speaking aloud in front of examiners.
I can’t recommend practicing with associative rehearsal strongly enough. So much of the tasting exam is about having confidence with one’s own internal experience, sensitivity, calibration and memory. This is a great way to improve it all.
Great article, and as I was told by Master Scott Carney, acurate analysis is key. You will get wines right by doing good analysis, rather than letting impressions guide you into guessing. He told me to learn the grid, know the grid, and get the points.
This is great, Tim. The associative rehearsal technique is incredibly effective. Thanks!
Thank you Master....
Thanks, Tim! This is great!
P. Hoyt. You do as this outline says, or you don't nail it. Get a group of consistent attendees together for weekly tasting (6 ppl total), come correct with classic wines (2 bottles each), and spend 2 hours on 2 flights, with additional personal time compiling notes and looking at where you went right & wrong. It will come together with PRACTICE.
John Ragan, I couldn't echo you more. My first thought was 'how do I strive to train myself to be a taster like Tim Gaiser.' Well, the answer is clear. We work hard, we study hard, and when someone as passionate and dedicated as Tim Gaiser puts up a posting like this, you embed it in your brain, and follow the mantra.
Thank you so much Tim.