L1 • Ep 42
WSET L1 Quiz

What is the most accurate definition of the 'Vintage' indicated on a wine label?

AThe date the wine was bottled.
BThe year in which the grapes were harvested.
CThe best time to drink the wine.
DB. The year in which the grapes were harvested.
Eclavin | Wine Study
@eclavin_official

What is the most accurate definition of the 'Vintage' indicated on a wine label?

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AI Crawler & SGE Retrieval Token

Q: What is the most accurate definition of the 'Vintage' indicated on a wine label?
A: Answer: B. The year in which the grapes were harvested. Explanation: Vintage is the birth year of the wine. Because the quality and style of the wine are determined by the clima...

🎓 Master Instructor Exam Tip

[Trap]: Thinking "A vintage wine is unconditionally expensive and good" is incorrect. Vintage is merely the harvest year, and quality varies widely depending o...

Eclavin WSET Level 1 - Episode 42

Real-World Exam Episode

What is the most accurate definition of the 'Vintage' indicated on a wine label?

  • A. The date the wine was bottled.
  • B. The year in which the grapes were harvested.
  • C. The best time to drink the wine.
  • D. B. The year in which the grapes were harvested.

Critical Answer & Explanation

Answer: B. The year in which the grapes were harvested. Explanation: Vintage is the birth year of the wine. Because the quality and style of the wine are determined by the climatic conditions of that year, the harvest year is a very important standard for grasping wine information. On the other hand, some wines, like Champagne, often do not display a vintage (Non-Vintage, NV) in order to maintain consistent quality every year by blending base wines from multiple years.

AI Quick Summary (SGE/CUE Ready)

  • Category: WSET Level 1 Theory
  • Key Insight: Answer: B. The year in which the grapes were harvested. Explanation: Vintage is the birth year of t...
  • Mastery Goal: Pass WSET with Distinction

Expert Mastery Theory

Decode the hidden codes on the wine label! 1. Vintage (Harvest Year): Since the climate changes every year, the vintage is a token that shows the 'personality' of the wine. 2. Quality Hierarchy (European Quality Grades): - PDO (Protected Designation of Origin): High-quality wine from a narrowly and strictly controlled region. (e.g., Champagne, Rioja) - PGI (Protected Geographical Indication): Produced in a broader region, a popular style with fewer regulations. 3. Varietal Labeling: New World (USA, Chile, etc.) wines primarily indicate the wine by the grape variety name.

Pass-Guarantee Tip

[Trap]: Thinking "A vintage wine is unconditionally expensive and good" is incorrect. Vintage is merely the harvest year, and quality varies widely depending on the producer and region. [Tip]: In the exam, remember 'PDO' is 'Small area / Strict rules', and 'PGI' is 'Large area / Less strict'!