At a recent auction, French Burgundy Domaine de la Roman?e-Conti went for $13,061. A bottle. But there aren't many of us who can (or want to) pay that much for a few glasses of wine?after all, when we uncork a bottle, drinking what we like should be our main objective.
This is a guest post from Food52.
So what makes a bottle that expensive? One of the reasons is that there?s precious little of it, and that?s because certain wine laws (for our Roman?e-Conti, we?re talking French wine laws?a canon you definitely don?t want to mess with) classify very specific parcels of land for a limited quantity of grapes. Supply is low, demand is high?and so too are the prices.
To replicate that same experience, minus the lifetime investment, here's what you can do.
One Vineyard, Two Vineyard
On the label, look for the words ?single vineyard.? That means, just like with that pricey French bottle, that all the grapes used to make the wine come from one very specific place. Get the same effect as something like an expensive Burgundy Pr?mier Cru for a third of the price with a single-vineyard, balanced California Chardonnay. (We like this one.) A single-vineyard wine is a wine that knows exactly who it is?it's confident and pulled-together, partly because of its unified origin.
The Label Matters
Try looking for ?second labels.? Some wineries have extra juice leftover from bottling their premium wines, and they either sell off the juice, or bottle it themselves under a different label. Some companies, like 90+ Cellars, have built their businesses on buying juice from superior wineries and simply bottling it under their own label?these usually range from $10 to $16 dollars.
Look for second labels especially with rich, Napa Cabernet Sauvignons, which will often run you more than your nightly wine budget. In a blind taste between two cabs?one a $60 well-known bottle, one a second label that ran about $16?my friends found the less expensive bottle to be a natural pleaser, over the expensive, more restrained one.
Experiment With White Wine and Different Varietals
If you?re looking to be adventurous, remember these two things:
1) White wines tend to be less expensive than reds. You?re likely to find a larger range of bottles in your price range, making trying a lot of different wines easy. Just don?t drink them all at once.
2) Go for lesser-known varietals, which tend to be more affordable. Like Sauvignon Blanc? Try this bottle of Torrentes from Argentina, or this inexpensive Vinho Verde from Portugal.
Drink Local
It?s becoming just as easy to drink local as it is to eat local, so look closer to home than the expensive, well-known varietals of abroad. (This book can help.) Ice wines serve as a great example here?indulge in a renowned Sauternes from Bordeaux for $200 a bottle, or choose a wonderful bottle of Eden Ice Cider, from upstate New York, for $25.
If You Can't Afford This Bottle, Go with That | Food52
Cathy Huyghe is a wine writer and lover of all things digital. Follow her on Twitter @cathyhuyghe.
Top image remixed from Refat (Shutterstock) and pixabay. In-post photos by James Ransom.
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