Anonymous wrote:Apothic?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no "right answer". All I was saying is that if you care about wine quality when hosting its best not to take advice from people who clearly buy wine at CVS and Costco and nowhere else.
There are literally thousands of options.
You want one? Buy an El Coto Rioja in the 2010-2012 range. It is AWESOME. Drinkable but also very complex and tannin rich so it will satisfy people who are wine snobs and those who are not. You gotta look for it, it's not next to the diapers at CVS. But it's also very reasonably priced, usually in the 10-14 range.
You are clearly not as much of a wine expert as you'd have us believe. Anyone who's anyone in the wine business loves buying bulk from Costco. The one in DC sells wine and hard liquor.
Yep - I can only convince the Wine Snob in my life to go to Costco because he enjoys browsing the wine!
Anonymous wrote:Any Sauvignon blanc from Marlborough should be reliable. Lots of good choices in the $10-$15 range. Oyster Bay, Mussel Bay, Nobilo, etc. [b]
Pinot Noir is a pretty safe red. Not as heavy and spicy as a Malbec or a Syrah, but substantial.
I like Barboursville Pinot Grigio out of Charlottesville a lot. Lots of good Italian Pinot Grigios out on the market though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no "right answer". All I was saying is that if you care about wine quality when hosting its best not to take advice from people who clearly buy wine at CVS and Costco and nowhere else.
There are literally thousands of options.
You want one? Buy an El Coto Rioja in the 2010-2012 range. It is AWESOME. Drinkable but also very complex and tannin rich so it will satisfy people who are wine snobs and those who are not. You gotta look for it, it's not next to the diapers at CVS. But it's also very reasonably priced, usually in the 10-14 range.
You are clearly not as much of a wine expert as you'd have us believe. Anyone who's anyone in the wine business loves buying bulk from Costco. The one in DC sells wine and hard liquor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Apothic?
Tastes like Kool aid. And I know it costs like 9 bucks at CVS. If you're going cheap at least go obscure
Anonymous wrote:OP here: thank you for all the suggestions. I usually go to a wine store and ask but in this case I want to amass a few bottles of each type just to have on hand that paid with a wider variety of food (blasphemy I know, but I am a wine been)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any Moscato or Riesling. Even non-wine drinkers typically enjoy those.
OP here , whenever I serve Rieslings folk complain they are too sweet.
From my experience a casual wine drinker will prefer a sweeter less dry taste. Much like they would enjoy a tropical fruity cocktail. A more serious wine drinker will prefer a dryer more tart wine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no "right answer". All I was saying is that if you care about wine quality when hosting its best not to take advice from people who clearly buy wine at CVS and Costco and nowhere else.
There are literally thousands of options.
You want one? Buy an El Coto Rioja in the 2010-2012 range. It is AWESOME. Drinkable but also very complex and tannin rich so it will satisfy people who are wine snobs and those who are not. You gotta look for it, it's not next to the diapers at CVS. But it's also very reasonably priced, usually in the 10-14 range.
You are clearly not as much of a wine expert as you'd have us believe. Anyone who's anyone in the wine business loves buying bulk from Costco. The one in DC sells wine and hard liquor.
Anonymous wrote:Decoy, Truth, Stag's Leap (cab) or a nice Sancerre for white
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My go-to bottles are, for red, Renieri Invetro (it has a glass cork, which is kind of cool), which costs $12-16 at Total Wine and which everyone always likes. For white, as many others have mentioned, I like sticking with NZ sav blancs. Oyster Bay is OK, but I prefer one called Crossings, which is around $11 at Total Wine. It's the best of the bunch in that price range. In summer I keep roses on hand, too, but obviously that's not needed this time of year.
Does a corkscrew work on a glass cork? How does one remove a glass cork?
Anonymous wrote:There is no "right answer". All I was saying is that if you care about wine quality when hosting its best not to take advice from people who clearly buy wine at CVS and Costco and nowhere else.
There are literally thousands of options.
You want one? Buy an El Coto Rioja in the 2010-2012 range. It is AWESOME. Drinkable but also very complex and tannin rich so it will satisfy people who are wine snobs and those who are not. You gotta look for it, it's not next to the diapers at CVS. But it's also very reasonably priced, usually in the 10-14 range.