Table of Contents - What Is Orange Wine? - How Long Skin Contact Changes the Wine - What Orange Wine Tastes Like - Where Orange Wine Comes From - Best Grapes for Orange Wine - How to Approach Orange Wine - Is Orange Wine Natural Wine? - Where to Start: Approachable Bottles Orange wine doesn't come from oranges. The name refers to the color — amber to deep orange — that results from a specific winemaking technique: fermenting white grape juice in contact with the grape skins for an extended period. That skin contact is what separates orange wine from conventional white wine, and it changes everything about how the wine looks, tastes, and feels. What Is Orange Wine? Orange wine is white wine made using a red wine technique. When winemakers make conventional white wine, they press the grapes and immediately separate the juice from the skins. The juice ferments alone, producing the pale, light-bodied wine you'd recognize as Pinot Grigio or Sauvignon Blanc. When winemakers make red ...
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Table of Contents - What Pinot Noir Tastes Like - Where Pinot Noir Comes From - The Burgundy Classification: A Primer - How to Pair Pinot Noir With Food - Pinot Noir Serving and Storage - Producers to Know By Region - Further Reading Pinot Noir is the most seductive red wine in the world — and the most difficult to make well. It's thin-skinned, finicky in the vineyard, and sensitive to winemaking decisions that would never matter with a more forgiving grape. When it's right, it's like nothing else: silky texture, haunting complexity, red fruit so vivid it seems almost alive. When it's wrong, it's thin, watery, or cloying. Understanding Pinot Noir means understanding what makes it different from other reds — structurally, geographically, and at the table. What Pinot Noir Tastes Like Pinot Noir is a light-to-medium-bodied red wine characterized by: Red fruit: Cherry, raspberry, and strawberry are the signature aromas — brighter and more red-toned than the dark fruit (...
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Table of Contents - How Rosé Is Made - Dry Rosé vs. Sweet Rosé: The Key Distinction - The Major Rosé Regions - What Rosé Tastes Like - Food Pairing With Rosé - Serving Rosé - Why Rosé Gets More Respect Now - Further Reading Rosé is the most misunderstood wine category. For decades it was dismissed as unsophisticated — something you drank at a garden party when you couldn't decide between red and white. That reputation has almost completely reversed. Dry Provence rosé is now one of the most sought-after summer wines globally, and serious winemakers across the world have made rosé a genuine priority. But rosé still confuses people. Is it sweet or dry? Is pink wine just for summer? What makes one bottle worth $8 and another worth $45? This guide covers all of it. How Rosé Is Made There are three main methods for making rosé: 1. Saignée ("Bleeding") Method Red grapes are crushed and the juice begins skin contact (as it would for red wine). After a short period — 2 to 24 hours...
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Table of Contents - What Makes Wine Sweet - Sweet White Wines - Sweet Red Wines - Sparkling Sweet Wines - Pairing Sweet Wines With Food - Serving Sweet Wines Sweet wine is more varied than the category name suggests. There's the barely-sweet Moscato d'Asti at 5% alcohol with effervescent bubbles. There's the deeply concentrated Sauternes, made from grapes shriveled by noble rot, poured in 2-ounce servings with foie gras. There's Port, rich and fortified, built for winter evenings. And there are hundreds of off-dry wines — Riesling, Vouvray, Gewürztraminer — where residual sweetness is a subtle structural element, not a defining feature. This guide covers all of it: what makes wine sweet, the best sweet wines by style, and how to serve and pair them. What Makes Wine Sweet Wine sweetness comes from residual sugar (RS) — the natural grape sugars that remain after fermentation, because the yeast stopped (or was stopped) before converting all the sugar to alcohol. Dry wine: ...
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Table of Contents - The Only Four Things That Determine How Wine Tastes - White Wine, Red Wine, and Rosé: What's the Difference? - The Main Grape Varieties You'll Encounter - How to Read a Wine Label - How to Actually Taste Wine - Simple Rules for Pairing Wine With Food - How to Order Wine at a Restaurant - How to Buy Wine at a Wine Shop - What to Drink Next Most wine guides for beginners make the same mistake: they're written by experts who've forgotten what it felt like not to know anything. They start with wine regions, grape varieties, and soil types — information that's genuinely useful once you have a foundation, but completely useless when you're standing in front of a wine list for the first time. This guide starts where it should: with what you'll actually encounter in a restaurant, wine shop, or at a party, and what to do about it. The Only Four Things That Determine How Wine Tastes Before anything else, here are the four structural elements of eve...
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Table of Contents - What a Wine Fridge Actually Does - Who Needs a Wine Fridge - Wine Fridge Types - Size Guide: How Many Bottles Do You Actually Need? - Temperature Settings by Wine Type - What to Look For When Buying - Wine Fridge Placement - How Long Can Wine Be Stored? - The Short Answer Most wine kept in a regular refrigerator gets damaged before it's ever opened. A kitchen fridge runs at 35–38°F, moves air constantly, and produces vibration from the compressor — all three of which accelerate wine deterioration. Wine fridges solve a specific problem: keeping wine in conditions that let it actually taste the way it's supposed to. This guide covers what a wine fridge does, whether you need one, what to look for, and how to use one correctly. What a Wine Fridge Actually Does A wine fridge isn't just a slightly warmer regular fridge. It's engineered around wine's actual needs: Temperature stability. Wine stores best between 45°F and 65°F, depending on the wine. The...
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Table of Contents - What Malbec Tastes Like - Where Malbec Comes From - Malbec Price Guide: What to Expect at Each Level - Malbec Food Pairing - Argentine Malbec vs. French Malbec - How to Serve Malbec - Producers to Know - Further Reading Malbec is one of the most beginner-friendly red wines in the world — and one of the most underrated. It's dark-fruited, smooth, and generous. It has less of the grippy tannin that makes Cabernet Sauvignon challenging to drink young. And it consistently overdelivers on quality at its price point. Most of the Malbec sold today comes from Argentina, where the grape found a second home after nearly disappearing from its French birthplace. Understanding the difference between French and Argentine Malbec is the key to getting the most out of the variety. What Malbec Tastes Like Malbec's core flavor profile is built around dark fruit — blackberry, plum, black cherry — with a velvety, soft texture that makes it immediately approachable. The key chara...