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Table of Contents - What Is Beaujolais? - The Gamay Grape - The Beaujolais Hierarchy - The 10 Crus of Beaujolais - Beaujolais Nouveau vs. Real Beaujolais - Notable Beaujolais Producers - How to Serve and Drink Beaujolais - Beaujolais Food Pairings - Beaujolais vs. Other Light Reds - Beaujolais for Wine Events and Team Tastings - Further Reading Beaujolais has spent decades being underestimated. The Beaujolais Nouveau craze of the 1980s and 90s — a marketing phenomenon that shipped the year's new vintage to every corner of the world in November — left the impression that Beaujolais was simple, forgettable, and cheap. That impression is wrong, and the wine world has been quietly correcting it for 20 years. The cru Beaujolais wines — the ten named villages at the top of the hierarchy — are among the most undervalued wines in France. Some rival Burgundy in complexity and age-worthiness, at a fraction of the price. What Is Beaujolais? Beaujolais is a wine region in eastern France, south...
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Table of Contents - What Is Chianti? - The Grapes in Chianti - Chianti Classico and Its Classifications - What Chianti Tastes Like - Top Chianti Classico Producers - Regular Chianti vs. Chianti Classico vs. Chianti Rufina - Chianti and Food Pairing - How to Store and Serve Chianti - Common Mistakes When Buying Chianti - Chianti for Team Wine Events - Further Reading Chianti has a complicated reputation. For decades, it meant cheap wine in a straw-covered bottle — the kind of fiasco flask that ended up as a candle holder. That era left a mark. But the wine made in Tuscany under the Chianti name today is, in many cases, exceptional — and understanding the difference between old Chianti and modern Chianti is genuinely worth your time. This guide is about the real thing: what Chianti is, what it tastes like, why Chianti Classico is a different category entirely, and how to pick bottles worth drinking. What Is Chianti? Chianti is a red wine from Tuscany, Italy, made primarily from Sangioves...
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Table of Contents - What Is Chianti? - The Grapes in Chianti - Chianti Classico and Its Classifications - What Chianti Tastes Like - Top Chianti Classico Producers - Regular Chianti vs. Chianti Classico vs. Chianti Rufina - Chianti and Food Pairing - How to Store and Serve Chianti - Common Mistakes When Buying Chianti - Chianti for Team Wine Events - Further Reading Chianti has a complicated reputation. For decades, it meant cheap wine in a straw-covered bottle — the kind of fiasco flask that ended up as a candle holder. That era left a mark. But the wine made in Tuscany under the Chianti name today is, in many cases, exceptional — and understanding the difference between old Chianti and modern Chianti is genuinely worth your time. This guide is about the real thing: what Chianti is, what it tastes like, why Chianti Classico is a different category entirely, and how to pick bottles worth drinking. What Is Chianti? Chianti is a red wine from Tuscany, Italy, made primarily from Sangioves...
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Table of Contents - Where Rioja Wine Comes From - The Grapes Behind Rioja Wine - Understanding Rioja Wine Aging Categories - What Rioja Wine Tastes Like - Top Rioja Wine Producers Worth Knowing - How to Pair Rioja Wine with Food - Rioja Wine vs. Other Spanish Reds - Serving and Storing Rioja Wine - Rioja Wine and Team Wine Experiences - Further Reading Rioja wine is Spain's most celebrated red, and once you understand how it works, you'll never look at a Spanish wine list the same way again. It comes from a landlocked region in northern Spain, straddled between the Pyrenees and the Cantabrian Mountains — a geography that creates unusually stable growing conditions for a wine region this close to the coast. What makes Rioja wine distinctive isn't just where it's grown. It's how long producers age it before they let it leave the winery. That commitment to oak and time is built into law here, and it shapes every bottle you open. Where Rioja Wine Comes From The Rioja De...
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Table of Contents - Where Rioja Wine Comes From - The Grapes Behind Rioja Wine - Understanding Rioja Wine Aging Categories - What Rioja Wine Tastes Like - Top Rioja Wine Producers Worth Knowing - How to Pair Rioja Wine with Food - Rioja Wine vs. Other Spanish Reds - Serving and Storing Rioja Wine - Rioja Wine and Team Wine Experiences - Further Reading Rioja wine is Spain's most celebrated red, and once you understand how it works, you'll never look at a Spanish wine list the same way again. It comes from a landlocked region in northern Spain, straddled between the Pyrenees and the Cantabrian Mountains — a geography that creates unusually stable growing conditions for a wine region this close to the coast. What makes Rioja wine distinctive isn't just where it's grown. It's how long producers age it before they let it leave the winery. That commitment to oak and time is built into law here, and it shapes every bottle you open. Where Rioja Wine Comes From The Rioja De...
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Table of Contents - Why Wine Storage Actually Matters - The Four Enemies of Wine - Short-Term Storage (Under 3 Months) - Long-Term Storage (3 Months to Years) - Storing Different Types of Wine - After Opening: How to Store an Unfinished Bottle - Common Storage Mistakes to Avoid - A Practical Storage Setup for Most People - Wine Storage and Team Building - Further Reading Why Wine Storage Actually Matters Most wine never gets the chance to age poorly — it gets drunk within 48 hours of purchase. But for the bottles you're setting aside, whether for a few weeks or several years, understanding how to store wine correctly is the difference between a wine that's better than the day you bought it and one that's faded, oxidized, or cooked. The good news: wine storage isn't complicated once you know what you're protecting the wine from. This guide covers the key variables, practical solutions for every budget and living situation, and how to think about which wines actually ...
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Table of Contents - Why Wine Storage Actually Matters - The Four Enemies of Wine - Short-Term Storage (Under 3 Months) - Long-Term Storage (3 Months to Years) - Storing Different Types of Wine - After Opening: How to Store an Unfinished Bottle - Common Storage Mistakes to Avoid - A Practical Storage Setup for Most People - Wine Storage and Team Building - Further Reading Why Wine Storage Actually Matters Most wine never gets the chance to age poorly — it gets drunk within 48 hours of purchase. But for the bottles you're setting aside, whether for a few weeks or several years, understanding how to store wine correctly is the difference between a wine that's better than the day you bought it and one that's faded, oxidized, or cooked. The good news: wine storage isn't complicated once you know what you're protecting the wine from. This guide covers the key variables, practical solutions for every budget and living situation, and how to think about which wines actually ...