| Please recommend some easy to find wines that are on the higher end/good to gift as a present. |
| Just go to Total Wine and ask for recommendations within your price range. Staff there is knowledgeable and helpful. But, it'll be totally random if you don't know anything about the recipient's preferences - white, red, or rose? Champagne? Dry or not so dry? Preferences for country/regions of origin? |
| Go to a specialty wine store, Addy Bassin's, Arrowine, Schneider's, or Calvert Woodley are all great options, and ask them. |
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Super easy is a nice Prosecco.
Recipient can drink, save, mix with OJ or re-gift. |
| Champagne is my go-to for same reasons stated above |
Or pour down the sink and put an end to the outrage. |
What outrage? |
| Go to the store and buy in the $35 range.x getting something from France sounds fancier. |
You’re kidding, right? Prosecco? For pity’s sake. Even the sink doesn’t deserve it. |
I have been told that the staff at Total Wine stores are only permitted to recommend "Winery Direct" wines (sold under various brand labels". Some like to buy one bottle of red wine & one bottle of white white as a gift. For an easy drinking red wine, consider a Beaujolais (from France). One brand of Cabernet sauvignon that is well respected is Caymus. Silver Oak is another. My favorite was Opus One until they changed the mixture a decade or so ago. Have not tasted the new Opus One--but it is expensive (about $400 a bottle). |