If I want to fully appreciate what a beer is offering, how do I properly taste the beer to reveal all the nuances in the aroma, flavor and aftertaste?
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2I disagree with the close votes that the question is broad - there are only a few generally accepted ways of sampling a beer. – mdma Jan 28 '14 at 16:09
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Beer Advocate's Guide is a decent one. The abridged version is:
- Look at the beer. How's the color and head?
- Swirl it a little bit to pull out the aroma
- Smell it. Swirl again if need be. I recommend taking a 20 second break after smelling, then smelling again, since if you smell too long, your nose gets used to it and it becomes harder to pick up the notes.
- Sip it. Don't swallow immediately, but keep it on your tongue for a moment. Breath out with it still in your mouth and pay attention to the resulting smell (unless you just ate a bunch of garlic before the beer).
- Taste again as the beer warms up a bit.

mdma
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Fishtoaster
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Re: number 3, smelling the back of one's hand is a common method of "cleansing" the olfactory palette to avoid fatigue. It works surprisingly well, IMO! – metasequoia Feb 04 '14 at 14:13
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According to Oz Clarke, you should burp the beer (to judge the hops).
See this clip from Oz & James Drink to Britain (episode 1, starting at about 2:28):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e1FH076U4Lk&t=2m28s

JDB
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Totally agree - never really tried it myself, but the question doesn't really set a context. That said, Fishtoaster's answer is excellent. – JDB Jan 27 '14 at 14:56