What's your favourite wine?
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Willamette Pinot is a go-to for us.
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@mclaincausey I've got a bottle of Rex Hill on my wine rack that's calling to me. Willamette is the only pinot noir I really like.
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@seawolf I won’t quite go that far on other Pinot regions (some continentals have been good, fewer California), but WV is not only my runaway favorite region for the grape but my favorite red short of brunellos, pauillacs, and the like.
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@mclaincausey WV and pinot noir are a match made in heaven. Big and bold are usually not descriptors associated with pinot noir, unless they come from WV.
I'm a big Paso Robles wine nerd, and I usually seek out bottles from the region because they're usually big and bold, but the winemaking skill is incredible there, and I have found so many great wineries.
This one is from a boutique winery called McPrice Myers, and their wines are consistently big, and the blends are always interesting and gorgeous. This is a GSM that I opened this weekend, and it was lovely.
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Here something tasty from my hometown in the Rheingau Region of Germany. Some of the better Rieslings grow here (the good ones not exported much).
Apologies for the crappy photo -
@goosehd That's good. lol
I think I read somewhere once that wine is produced in all 50 states, which isn't great. I've had wines from Massachusetts (where I'm originally from) and they're awful. Virginia (where I lived for a good chunk of time) had a couple of decent bottles. The Norton grape does particularly well there, but not much else.
Just googled because I was curious, and Alaskan wineries buy juice from other states and make the wine in Alaska. That might be alright.
I live squarely in a state with some of the best wine regions in the world, and there's always something new to try, and it's widely available all over. I'm always shocked when I travel back to the east coast and restaurant menus have one or two bottles from CA and the rest is old world wine. Here, it's the opposite. And most of my wine knowledge comes from experience drinking California wine, so I'm kind of lost when it comes to the old world bottles.
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Best wine I ever had pictured below. Might be the meat (wagu) and the place (Tokyo). In any case, a great dinner.
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Okay friends, I’ve had a couple of glasses of wine, and I’m feeling chatty, so here goes:
This is a bottle from Oso Libre in Paso Robles, CA. Oso Libre is easily my favorite winery in Paso. They use a lot of French and Italian varietals, and make wonderful big wines in a very Paso style. The wines are expertly crafted; sometimes with a kiss of oak when necessary, and are delivered in a big, juicy package that’s always balanced. Their young bottles drink well, and the older bottles drink even better. You can really get a sense of the winemaker’s skill with this blend.
This bottle is a cab/primitivo blend, and it’s phenomenal. Full-bodied is with a lingering spicy finish that tastes like more.
Highly recommended.
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^ Looks and sounds great.
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Hey guys looking to get into wine not sure what to try any recommendations for a beginner?
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white or red? US, Europe or where are you?
EU based I would say a good start could be white: Pinot Gris, and red: Primitivo
but thats personal preference, you need to find your taste
and, wine is a craft work, don't buy in a supermarket, go to a wine shop or even better to a winemaker
don't buy under €10