iLovedThatWine

A personal wine memory app

Guide

How to keep wine tasting notes without making the process annoying

Good wine tasting notes do not need to be fancy. They just need to help you remember what the bottle tasted like, how much you liked it, and whether it was worth finding again.

What to include in wine tasting notes

Bottle name and winery
One or two taste impressions
Your rating
Where you had it
Whether you would buy it again
Any detail that makes the memory easier to trigger later

That is enough for most people. You do not need formal tasting language unless you enjoy using it.

How short tasting notes can still be useful

The goal of tasting notes is not to impress anyone. The goal is to leave your future self a useful memory. Short notes work if they answer the questions you are most likely to have later.

Was it smooth or sharp? Dry or fruity? Light or bold? Worth the price? Worth buying again? A few words that answer those questions are usually enough.

A simple tasting note template

Bottle: Producer + wine name
Taste: 2–4 words
Rating: simple score
Context: where you had it / with what meal
Decision: favorite, buy again, or skip

That format is fast enough for real life and structured enough to help later.

Examples of tasting notes you will understand later

Smooth, dark fruit, good with steak, 4.5, buy again.
Crisp, citrusy, easy summer white, 4.0, patio wine.
Bold, oaky, a little too heavy for me, 3.5.
Light, refreshing, better with food than on its own, 4.0.

Mistakes that make wine notes useless

Writing notes so vague they could describe anything
Saving the note but not the bottle name
Trying to be too detailed and giving up on the habit
Taking a photo and assuming you will remember why it mattered

If your notes feel like homework, simplify them. Consistency matters more than elegance.

When a dedicated tool starts to help

If you are keeping more than a handful of notes, structure starts to matter. Thewine tasting notes apppage shows the product-led version of this workflow. If you want a broader record of your wine history, thewine journal apppage goes wider than note-taking alone.

Takeaway

The best wine tasting notes are short enough to keep and clear enough to use later

If your notes help you remember the bottle, your reaction, and whether it was worth repeating, they are doing their job.