Sorry on the first post. It was the exact opposite of what I was trying to say. Which leads me to a question I might display. Anyway, when you are looking for a direct bite and it is dry, your body will compensate by making more saliva. Biologically speaking, it makes you "wet" on many aspects.
If you take out the sexual innuendo that I normally tend to, bartending is another. I can tell you. I also deal with the natural way of living and health. If you are diabetic, anything sweet is not good and drinking a glass or two of red wine will not help your cause of living. If I go on, which I tend to do, also, on top of sexually and bartending, my whole thoughts on the topic will be too long. You can look up dry and sweet red wines and their reprocussions and benefits to your health. If you don't desire that's o.k., too.
All wines are good whether you care to whine about your wine or whether the taste in your mouth is bitter or sweet. Most bodies seem to need fermented somethings.
I don't mean to sound snappy, but Don is on his way home. And guess what I have to do??? Clean the KITHCEN! Of course! Love Ya tons!
This post was edited by Merlin at June 14, 2019 12:06 AM MDT
The dry feel on the tongue and in the mouth when thirsty is slightly similar to the feel or taste of bitterness when one tastes tannins or alkaline foods. A dry wine doesn't just lack sweetness, it has an actively bitter or "dry" taste, sometimes immediate but in older wines not sensed until the aftertaste.