iLovedThatWine

A personal wine memory app

Wine tasting notes app

A wine tasting notes app for saving short notes that still mean something later

iLovedThatWine helps you save wine tasting notes, ratings, and bottle details in one place, so your notes stay tied to the exact wine you drank. Instead of vague text you cannot interpret later, you keep a practical record of what stood out, how much you liked it, and whether it deserves another bottle.

Write less, remember more

Good tasting notes do not need to be long. They just need to capture the details that help you recognize the bottle later.

Tie notes to the exact bottle

Notes are much more useful when they stay attached to the bottle name, winery, rating, and place instead of floating around as disconnected text.

Turn impressions into useful recall

Save enough detail to answer future questions like whether the wine was smooth, dry, jammy, worth the money, or worth buying again.

Distinct job

What makes wine tasting notes useful later

Tasting notes are only valuable if they help you later. That means the notes need to be short enough to capture in the moment, clear enough to understand later, and attached to the exact bottle they describe.

A tasting notes app is not mainly about keeping a broad diary of your wine life. It is about preserving the part of the experience your future self will want when choosing what to order, recommend, or buy again.

What to record

What to write when you log a bottle

Bottle name and winery
Your rating
A few plain-language taste notes
Texture or style cues like smooth, dry, bold, light, or jammy
Where you had it
Price if that matters to you
Whether you would buy it again
Anything distinctive that will trigger memory later

You do not need a formal tasting vocabulary. Notes like “smooth, dark fruit, easy with steak” or “crisp, citrusy, would buy again for summer” are often more useful than longer, more performative descriptions.

Examples

Short tasting note patterns that work in real life

Smooth, dark fruit, low tannin, great with steak.
Crisp and citrusy, easy patio white, would buy again.
Bold but balanced, blackberry, a little oak, worth the price.
Light-bodied, refreshing, better with food than on its own.

These are not fancy. That is the point. They are quick enough to save in the moment and specific enough to help later.

Objections

Why tasting notes fail in generic notes apps or random photos

The problem with generic notes is not that they cannot hold wine notes. It is that they do not usually keep your notes tied to a structured wine entry. A note that says “nice cherry, smooth, liked it” becomes much less useful if you cannot quickly remember which bottle it belonged to.

Bottle photos have a similar problem. They can help you remember the label, but not always why the bottle mattered. A dedicated tasting notes flow keeps the notes, the bottle, the rating, and the context together.

If your main need is a broader personal record, the wine journal app page covers that wider diary-style use case. If you want the educational how-to version, read how to keep wine tasting notes for a more instructional guide.

Workflow

How ratings, bottle details, and notes work together

The best tasting notes are not isolated text. They work best as part of a quick decision system: save the bottle, rate it, write a short note, and add any signal that matters later such as favorite or buy-again status.

That combination is what makes the note useful. The rating tells you how much you liked it. The bottle name tells you what it was. The note tells you why it stood out. The extra tags make future decisions easier.

If your focus is broader tracking and retrieval, the wine tracker app page goes deeper on that workflow.

FAQ

Wine tasting notes app FAQs

What should a wine tasting notes app include?

A useful wine tasting notes app should let you save the bottle name, winery, your rating, a few quick taste notes, and the context that helps later, like where you had it, what it cost, and whether you would buy it again.

How detailed should wine tasting notes be?

They do not need to be long. Short notes are often better, as long as they help your future self remember what stood out. A few clear words about flavor, texture, and whether you liked it are usually enough.

Why are tasting notes better when tied to the bottle?

Because notes by themselves become hard to interpret later. When your notes stay tied to the bottle name, winery, rating, and place, they become much easier to search and understand.

Is a wine tasting notes app better than using my phone notes?

Usually, yes. A notes app can store text, but a dedicated wine tasting notes app keeps your notes structured around the exact bottle so they are easier to find and use later.

Related pages

Ready when you are

Start saving wine tasting notes you will actually look at again

Create an account and turn quick impressions, ratings, and bottle details into tasting notes you can search, understand, and use whenever the next wine decision shows up.