Posts

Image
Table of Contents - What Is Carménère? - What Does Carménère Taste Like? - Carménère vs. Merlot: How to Tell Them Apart - Chile's Key Carménère Regions - How Is Carménère Made? - Top Carménère Producers to Try - Food Pairing with Carménère - Serving Carménère - Carménère and Team Wine Experiences - Carménère's Future - Further Reading Carménère has one of the most surprising origin stories in the wine world. For decades, it was mistaken for Merlot. Grown across Chile, labeled as something it wasn't, quietly producing wine that tasted different from Merlot but nobody could quite explain why. Then in 1994, a French ampelographer visited Chile and made the identification official: what Chileans were calling Merlot was actually Carménère, a variety thought to be essentially extinct in its Bordeaux homeland. That discovery transformed Chilean wine. Carménère is now the country's flagship grape — and understanding it is one of the best entry points into South American wine. W...
Image
Table of Contents - What Is Carménère? - What Does Carménère Taste Like? - Carménère vs. Merlot: How to Tell Them Apart - Chile's Key Carménère Regions - How Is Carménère Made? - Top Carménère Producers to Try - Food Pairing with Carménère - Serving Carménère - Carménère and Team Wine Experiences - Carménère's Future - Further Reading Carménère has one of the most surprising origin stories in the wine world. For decades, it was mistaken for Merlot. Grown across Chile, labeled as something it wasn't, quietly producing wine that tasted different from Merlot but nobody could quite explain why. Then in 1994, a French ampelographer visited Chile and made the identification official: what Chileans were calling Merlot was actually Carménère, a variety thought to be essentially extinct in its Bordeaux homeland. That discovery transformed Chilean wine. Carménère is now the country's flagship grape — and understanding it is one of the best entry points into South American wine. W...
Image
Table of Contents - What Is Côtes du Rhône? - The Grape Varieties Behind Côtes du Rhône - Côtes du Rhône vs. Côtes du Rhône Villages - What Does Côtes du Rhône Taste Like? - Key Producers and Bottles to Buy - How to Serve Côtes du Rhône - Food Pairing with Côtes du Rhône - Côtes du Rhône Rosé - White Côtes du Rhône - How Côtes du Rhône Fits Into French Wine - Sharing Côtes du Rhône in a Group Setting - Quick Summary: Why Côtes du Rhône Belongs on Your Table - Further Reading If there's one French wine region that consistently delivers quality at an honest price, it's the Rhône Valley — and within it, Côtes du Rhône is the name you'll reach for most often. These wines are the backbone of French everyday drinking: fruit-forward, food-friendly, and refreshingly unpretentious despite coming from one of France's most serious wine regions. Understanding Côtes du Rhône unlocks a broad category of wines that will serve you well at weeknight dinners, casual gatherings, and every...
Image
Table of Contents - Why German Wine Deserves More of Your Attention - The Key German Wine Regions - German Wine Grapes: Beyond Riesling - Decoding the German Wine Label - How to Read a German Wine Label: Practical Examples - German Wine and Food Pairing - German Wine Value and Where to Start - German Wine and Team Experiences - Getting Started: Three Bottles to Try - Further Reading If you think German wine means sweet, low-alcohol Liebfraumilch, you're about thirty years behind the conversation. Modern German wine is some of the most exciting, age-worthy, and terroir-expressive wine made anywhere on earth. The Mosel produces Rieslings of extraordinary finesse. The Pfalz turns out rich, powerful reds. The Rheingau makes wines that can outlast Burgundy in a cellar. And yet German wine remains one of the most misunderstood categories in the world — which, frankly, is an opportunity for anyone paying attention. This guide covers everything you need to know: the key regions, the main g...
Image
Table of Contents - Why German Wine Deserves More of Your Attention - The Key German Wine Regions - German Wine Grapes: Beyond Riesling - Decoding the German Wine Label - How to Read a German Wine Label: Practical Examples - German Wine and Food Pairing - German Wine Value and Where to Start - German Wine and Team Experiences - Getting Started: Three Bottles to Try - Further Reading If you think German wine means sweet, low-alcohol Liebfraumilch, you're about thirty years behind the conversation. Modern German wine is some of the most exciting, age-worthy, and terroir-expressive wine made anywhere on earth. The Mosel produces Rieslings of extraordinary finesse. The Pfalz turns out rich, powerful reds. The Rheingau makes wines that can outlast Burgundy in a cellar. And yet German wine remains one of the most misunderstood categories in the world — which, frankly, is an opportunity for anyone paying attention. This guide covers everything you need to know: the key regions, the main g...
Image
Table of Contents - Why Argentine Wine Is Different - The Major Argentine Wine Regions - Argentine Wine Regions Compared - The Grape Varieties of Argentine Wine - Pairing Argentine Wine with Food - Buying Argentine Wine: What You Need to Know - Argentine Wine in Corporate Events - Further Reading There's a moment in every wine drinker's journey when Argentine wine stops being "oh, that's good Malbec" and becomes something you actively seek out. It happened for me when I first tasted a high-altitude Malbec from Luján de Cuyo — the kind of wine that has dark fruit intensity but an elegance I didn't expect from South America. Since then, Argentine wine has consistently overdelivered. Argentina is the fifth-largest wine producer in the world and, by any measure, the most dynamic. It's a country that took a borrowed grape (Malbec from France's Cahors), moved it to the Andes, and produced something entirely its own. And it didn't stop there. Why Argentin...
Image
Table of Contents - Why Argentine Wine Is Different - The Major Argentine Wine Regions - Argentine Wine Regions Compared - The Grape Varieties of Argentine Wine - Pairing Argentine Wine with Food - Buying Argentine Wine: What You Need to Know - Argentine Wine in Corporate Events - Further Reading There's a moment in every wine drinker's journey when Argentine wine stops being "oh, that's good Malbec" and becomes something you actively seek out. It happened for me when I first tasted a high-altitude Malbec from Luján de Cuyo — the kind of wine that has dark fruit intensity but an elegance I didn't expect from South America. Since then, Argentine wine has consistently overdelivered. Argentina is the fifth-largest wine producer in the world and, by any measure, the most dynamic. It's a country that took a borrowed grape (Malbec from France's Cahors), moved it to the Andes, and produced something entirely its own. And it didn't stop there. Why Argentin...