Table of Contents - What Decanting Does - Which Wines Benefit From Decanting - Which Wines Don't Need Decanting - How Long to Decant - Do You Need a Decanter? - The Double Decant - Temperature After Decanting - The Short Version Decanting is one of those wine rituals that looks complicated and often gets treated as optional or purely ceremonial. It isn't. For the right wine, decanting makes a real, noticeable difference in how it tastes. For the wrong wine, it's unnecessary. Knowing which is which is the whole skill. What Decanting Does A decanter is just a vessel — typically glass, often wide-bottomed, designed to hold wine that has been poured out of the original bottle. Pouring wine into a decanter does two things: 1. Separates sediment. As wine ages, the pigments and tannins in red wine polymerize and fall out of solution as sediment — a dark, gritty deposit at the bottom of the bottle. In old wines, this sediment is significant. Drinking wine with sediment in the glass...
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Table of Contents - What Is Port Wine? - How Port Wine Is Made - The Main Styles of Port Wine - Port Wine Styles at a Glance - Food Pairings for Port Wine - How to Serve Port Wine - The Best Port Wine Producers - Port Wine in Group Settings - Further Reading Port wine is one of those categories that sounds more complicated than it is. The range of styles can feel overwhelming at first — Ruby, Tawny, LBV, Vintage, Colheita — but once you understand the basic logic behind how port wine is made, everything falls into place. I've poured a lot of port at wine events, and it's one of the few wines that consistently makes people change their minds. Guests who arrive thinking they don't like sweet wines often discover they love a well-aged Tawny. People who assumed port was only for old men with cigars walk away planning where to buy a bottle. It earns its reputation. What Is Port Wine? Port wine is a fortified wine produced exclusively in the Douro Valley in northern Portugal. ...
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Table of Contents - What Is Sangiovese? - What Does Sangiovese Taste Like? - Sangiovese vs. Other Italian Reds - The Main Sangiovese Wine Regions - Understanding Italian Wine Labels - The Best Food Pairings for Sangiovese - How to Buy Sangiovese: A Practical Price Guide - Serving Sangiovese - Sangiovese and Corporate Wine Experiences - Further Reading If you've ever loved a bottle of Chianti over a plate of pasta, you've already met Sangiovese — you just might not have known its name. This grape is the backbone of some of Italy's most iconic wines, from everyday Chianti to the age-worthy Brunello di Montalcino. And yet it remains one of the most misunderstood varieties for wine drinkers outside of Italy. I want to change that. Sangiovese is one of those grapes that rewards curiosity. Once you understand what it is and where it comes from, you start tasting it differently — and ordering it with far more confidence. What Is Sangiovese? Sangiovese is Italy's most widely pl...
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Table of Contents - Pinot Grigio vs. Pinot Gris: Same Grape, Different Name - What Pinot Grigio Tastes Like - Where Pinot Grigio Comes From - Pinot Grigio Food Pairing - How to Choose: Italian vs. Alsatian Style - Pinot Grigio Price Guide - How to Serve Pinot Grigio - Further Reading Pinot Grigio is the world's most ordered white wine — and one of the most misunderstood. Ask most people what Pinot Grigio tastes like, and they'll say "light and crisp." That describes one style. But the same grape in Alsace produces something rich, spicy, and full-bodied enough to age for a decade. In Oregon, it falls somewhere between. In northern Italy, it ranges from watery supermarket pours to some of the most characterful whites the country produces. The name is the same. The wine is very different depending on where it comes from and how seriously it was made. Pinot Grigio vs. Pinot Gris: Same Grape, Different Name They are identical grapes. The name difference reflects two distin...
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Table of Contents - What Tempranillo Tastes Like - How Spanish Wine Aging Classifications Work - Where Tempranillo Comes From - Tempranillo Food Pairing - Tempranillo Price Guide - How to Serve Tempranillo - Further Reading Tempranillo is Spain's most important red grape, and one of the most underappreciated in the world. It produces the wines that built Spain's international reputation — Rioja and Ribera del Duero — yet it remains less familiar to most wine drinkers than Cabernet Sauvignon, Pinot Noir, or even Malbec. That's partly a marketing problem and partly a labelling one: Spanish wine has historically led with region rather than grape, so bottles say "Rioja" or "Ribera del Duero" rather than "Tempranillo" on the front label. Once you understand what Tempranillo is and what it does, Spanish wine opens up significantly. What Tempranillo Tastes Like Tempranillo has a distinctive flavour profile built on medium-weight red fruit, leather, an...
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Table of Contents - Method 1: Push the Cork In (Most Reliable) - Method 2: Screw and Pliers (Most Tool-Based Reliable) - Method 3: Wrap and Tap (The Shoe Method) - Method 4: Knife (Careful, Works Well) - Method 5: Serrated Knife (Sabre Method — Only for Sparkling) - Method 6: Wire Hanger - Methods That Don't Work Well (Despite Going Viral) - Preventing the Problem You have a bottle of wine and nothing to open it with. It happens to everyone. Some methods for opening wine without a corkscrew are safe, effective, and worth knowing. Others look impressive in videos and reliably result in broken glass, wine-soaked ceilings, or worse. Here are the methods that actually work, in order from most to least reliable. How to Open Wine Without a Corkscrew Method 1: Push the Cork In (Most Reliable) What you need: A thin, blunt object — a pen, a chopstick, a marker, the back of a spoon handle. How to do it: - Remove the foil capsule from the top of the bottle. - Place the blu...
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Table of Contents - What Is Natural Wine? - Natural vs. Organic vs. Biodynamic - How Natural Wine Is Made Differently - What Natural Wine Tastes Like - Popular Natural Wine Varieties and Regions - Orange Wine: Natural Wine's Most Visible Category - How to Buy Natural Wine - Is Natural Wine Better? - Further Reading Natural wine is the most argued-about category in the wine world. Enthusiasts call it the most honest expression of a place. Critics call it an excuse for flawed wine. Both sides are responding to real things — and neither is entirely right. Here's what natural wine actually is, how it's made, what it tastes like, and why it matters. What Is Natural Wine? There's no legal definition of natural wine. No regulatory body certifies it. No official standard governs its production. This is one of the reasons it generates so much debate. In practice, "natural wine" refers to wine made with: - Organically or biodynamically grown grapes — no synthetic pestic...