- Table wine
- Generally any wine that is not sparkling or fortified. In the US these wines must also be between 7% and 14% alcohol by volume. The term table wine also refers to a wine that is considered a good, everyday drinker. In the European Union, the "Table Wine" category (and "Table Wine with a Geographical Indication") was previously the quality category that came below "Quality Wines" or Quality Wines Produced in Specified Regions (QWPSR) such as French AOC and Italian DOCG wines until both terms were eliminated in 2009. Now most European wines that were formally labeled as "Table Wines" are just labeled as "Wine" while those that were labeled as "Table Wine with a Geographical Indication" are now Protected Geographical Indication (PGI).
- Tafelwein
- German term for table wine.
- Taille
- In Champagne wine production this is the juice that is retrieved from the second pressing (or "tails") of grapes which is generally considered to be of lower quality than the juice that comes from the first pressing (or "cuvee")
- Talento
- An Italian sparkling wine made according to the traditional method of Champagne--similar to the Spanish term Cava.
- Tastevin
- A silver, shallow cup used for tasting wine.
- Tasting flight
- Refers to a selection of wines, usually between three and eight glasses, but sometimes as many as fifty, presented for the purpose of sampling and comparison.
- T.B.A.
- An abbreviation for the German wine Trockenbeerenauslese.
- Tenuta
- Italian term for a wine estate
- Terroir
- Special characteristics expressed in a wine that result from the interaction of geography, geology, climate, and the plant's genetics.
- Tertiary aromas
- The aromas in wine that are developed as the wine ages in the bottle. This is in contrast to the primary aromas which come from the grape variety itself and the secondary aromas which come from the winemaking process.
- Tinto
- Spanish and Portuguese term for a red wine or grape
- Tonneau
- French cask capable of holding 900 litres (240 US gal) or the equivalent of 100 cases of twelve standard 750 mL (75 cL) bottles of wine. Historically associated with Bordeaux wine.
- Transparency
The ability of a wine to clearly portray all unique aspects of its flavor — fruit, floral, and mineral notes.[16]
- Triage
- A French term referring to the selective picking of grapes, instead of machine harvesting.
- Trocken
- German for "dry".
- Trockenbeerenauslese
- A German term meaning approximately "A late harvest of selected dry berries". A type of German wine made from grapes affected by noble rot. Such grapes can be so rare that it can take a skilled picker a day to gather enough for just one bottle.[17] A Prädikat in Germany and Austria.
- Typicity
- How well a wine reflects the characteristics of its grape variety and terroir