Matching glasses
Use the same clean glass shape so the vessel does not become the main difference.
Wine tasting kits for beginners
The best beginner wine tasting kit is simple: matching glasses, two contrasting wines, numbered bottle covers, water, and a reliable way to save what you noticed. Add a flight board for hosting or an aroma kit only when the extra structure matches how you learn.
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Best short answer
A useful tasting kit controls the variables: the same glass shape, similar serving temperatures, hidden labels when tasting blind, and one repeatable note format. That makes differences between wines easier to notice and remember.

Corkly supplies the guided method and saved note, so the physical kit can stay small.
Quick picks
Choose the component that solves your actual setup problem; most beginners do not need all five.
Disclosure: As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. Corkly may also earn commissions from other affiliate links at no extra cost to you. We choose picks for usefulness and fit, not for live prices or ratings.
Buy first
Best for: hiding labels for two- to ten-bottle comparisons
Numbered reusable bags remove label bias without forcing you to buy a large party bundle.
View bagsBest core glass set
Best for: using one consistent glass shape across a flight
Matching universal-style glasses make differences easier to compare and remain useful after the tasting.
View glassesBest group flight
Best for: casual side-by-side flights and hosting
The labeled paddle keeps four pours organized, though normal universal glasses remain better for focused aroma work.
View flight setBest party format
Best for: giving a group a ready-made structure
It bundles numbered bags, glass tags, tip sheets, notes, and pencils for a social tasting night.
View party gameOptional splurge
Best for: structured aroma-reference practice
It provides a broad scent library, but beginners can improve without buying an aroma kit.
View aroma kitStart here
Use the same clean glass shape so the vessel does not become the main difference.
Choose one clear contrast and hide the labels with numbered bags or plain paper.
Keep water nearby and use plain bread or crackers only when you need a reset.
Record the strongest aromas, structure, preference, and one thing to compare next time.
These are exact Amazon products selected for distinct jobs. Product cards without a photo are intentional: Corkly does not substitute a related image when a stable exact-product image is unavailable.
Best for: a simple blind-tasting setup
A low-clutter way to hide labels and keep a group tasting organized. Use two bags for practice or all ten for a larger gathering.
Best for: the core glass set
Four matching universal-style glasses that remain useful for everyday drinking after the comparison is over.
Best for: hosting a social flight
A wood paddle and four small glasses for keeping casual flights labeled and easy to carry.
Best for: a structured wine night with friends
A ready-made group format with numbered bags, glass tags, tasting references, note sheets, and pencils.
Best for: a serious aroma-training splurge
A broad reference library for people who want structured scent-recognition practice across wine styles.
Use the physical tools to control the tasting, then use Corkly to guide the observations and keep the memory searchable.
Start with CorklyTwo contrasting wines, two matching glasses per person, two numbered bags, water, and Corkly.
Three or four wines, numbered bags, matching glasses or a flight board, water, and a planned reveal order.
One real wine, a short aroma shortlist, nearby food or spice references, and an aroma kit only if you want repeatable scent standards.
Start with two contrasting wines, matching clean glasses, water, numbered bags or another way to hide labels, and a simple place to save notes. A flight board, party game, or aroma kit is optional.
No. Aroma kits provide consistent scent references, but repeated comparison with real wines, food, spices, herbs, and fruit can also build useful aroma memory. Buy one only if structured smell practice appeals to you.
Two wines are enough for a focused beginner comparison. Three or four work for a social flight, but larger lineups create palate fatigue and make each lesson harder to remember.
Flight glasses are often smaller so several fit on one board. They are convenient for serving, but a clean universal wine glass usually gives aromas more room and is the better first purchase for learning.
Product details were checked against the live Amazon listings and the manufacturers' public descriptions. Further reading: WSET's guide to tasting wine and Aromaster's official kit page.
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Read guideUse the kit
Start with two wines and one clear contrast. Corkly will guide the tasting and turn the result into a note you can revisit.