Dry wines tend to taste sour to persons not accustomed to them, but there are varying degrees off dryness. Sweet wines won't taste like Mountain Dew (except the cheap stuff) but it tastes relatively sweet.
a sweet wine quenches thirst, and a dry wine leaves your tongue dry
One way is to read the wine label, ask a wine clerk, or taste it.
neither it is quite bitter, it ios a great beverage many selections
Dry wine has fewer calories than sweet wine.
Chianti is a dry red wine.
DRy
Merlot wines tend to be on the dry side (in wine talk, "dry" is the opposite of "sweet", and nowadays even most "sweet" wines are not really THAT sweet). If you want a wine that's actually what a non-wine person would consider sweet, look for something labeled as a "dessert" wine, such as a Moscato.
No its a sweet wine, doesnt leave your tongue dry..
Dry white wine is normally used for savory dishes. Sweet white wine is rarely used in cooking.
Sweet, and it is very good
== == Salut! == == The "classic" dry red wines (and among the most easily found) are Cabernet and Merlot.Yes, a wine is considered "dry" when it is not sweet. The dryer the wine is, the less sweet it is. Cabernet Sauvignon is a dry red wine.
No, because moscato is a sweet white wine, and marsala is a dry red wine.
Itβs dry
Dry (brut means dry).
No, Merlot is medium dry French wine.