Learn Wine, One Glass at a Time
Somm Scribe is a practical wine education blog designed to help you taste with confidence. From understanding wine labels and regions to learning how flavor, oak, and structure work together, each guide is built to make wine more approachable — one glass at a time.
Why the Same Grape Can Taste So Different
If wine has ever felt inconsistent or confusing, this is usually why. You buy a Pinot Noir you love and the next bottle with the same grape on the label tastes darker, earthier, or heavier than you expected. Same grape. Same color. Completely different experience. That disconnect isn’t your palate failing you. It’s how wine actually works. A grape variety is only the starting point. What happens to that grape, where it’s grown, how it’s handled, and how it’s finished has a massive impact on how the wine ends up tasting. Once you understand this, wine stops feeling unpredictable and starts feeling readable.
Grocery Store Wine: How to Pick a Bottle Without Overthinking It
Standing in front of a grocery store wine aisle can feel weirdly stressful. Hundreds of bottles. Labels shouting at you. Prices jumping all over the place. And somehow you’re supposed to make a “good” choice in under two minutes. Here’s the truth most people don’t hear: grocery store wine isn’t a test. You don’t need to decode the shelf or outsmart the industry. You just need a simple way to narrow the noise. Once you stop trying to pick the best bottle and start trying to pick the right-for-you bottle, this gets a lot easier.
How to Talk to a Sommelier
For a lot of people, the hardest part of ordering wine at a restaurant isn’t the price or the wine list — it’s the moment the sommelier walks over. You might worry about saying the wrong thing. Or sounding inexperienced. Or freezing because the list feels unfamiliar and everyone else seems confident. None of that means you’re bad at wine. It just means the setting adds pressure. The good news? Sommeliers aren’t testing you. They’re trying to help you enjoy your meal. And you don’t need fancy language or deep knowledge to have a great conversation with one.
How to Read a Wine List
If you’ve ever opened a wine list and suddenly felt like you were taking a test you didn’t study for, you’re not alone. Wine lists can feel dense, unfamiliar, and oddly high-pressure especially when the table is waiting and the server is standing nearby. But here’s the quiet truth most people don’t realize: you’re not supposed to recognize everything on the page. You’re supposed to recognize your preferences. Once you shift your focus from decoding the list to understanding how it’s organized, ordering wine becomes a lot less intimidating and a lot more enjoyable.
Burgundy: Style, Structure, and What to Expect
Burgundy has a reputation that can feel a little intimidating. The bottles are often expensive. The labels can be cryptic. And people talk about it with a seriousness that makes it seem like you’re supposed to already “get it” before you even open the wine. But at its core, Burgundy isn’t complicated because it’s fancy, it’s complicated because it’s precise. Once you understand what Burgundy is trying to express, the wines start to feel surprisingly intuitive. This guide isn’t about memorizing villages or decoding classifications. It’s about understanding the style of Burgundy so you know what to expect when you pour a glass and whether it’s a style you’ll actually enjoy.
Red Fruit vs. Dark Fruit in Wine
If you’ve ever heard a wine described as red-fruited or dark-fruited and nodded along without being totally sure what that meant, you’re not alone. Those phrases show up everywhere — tasting notes, wine lists, conversations — but they’re rarely explained in a way that feels useful. The good news is this: you don’t need to identify specific fruits or train your nose to tell raspberries from cherries. What matters is understanding what those fruit categories suggest about the wine as a whole. Once you do, these descriptions stop feeling abstract and start helping you choose wines you actually enjoy. Let’s break it down in a way that’s practical, intuitive, and easy to remember
How Food Changes the Way Wine Tastes
If you’ve ever opened a bottle you loved at dinner, then felt a little underwhelmed when you tried it again later, you’re not imagining things. The wine didn’t suddenly lose its charm, it was just missing something. Wine is rarely experienced on its own. Most of the time, it’s part of a larger moment: a meal, a conversation, a setting. What you eat alongside it can quietly change how the wine feels — softening some edges, pulling certain flavors forward, or shifting the balance altogether. Once you start noticing this interaction, wine becomes less mysterious and far more forgiving. Instead of wondering why a bottle feels inconsistent, you begin to see how food is shaping the experience in real time.
What “Smooth” Wine Really Means
“Smooth” is one of the most common words people use to describe wine and one of the least precise. You’ll hear it at tastings, restaurants, and dinner parties - “I like smooth reds” or “This wine is really smooth”. The problem is that smooth isn’t a technical wine term. It doesn’t appear on labels. And it doesn’t point to a single grape, region, or style. But it does describe a real experience, one that’s worth understanding.
How to Store Opened Wine
Opening a bottle of wine often comes with a quiet question in the back of your mind, How long is this going to be good for? Maybe you only wanted one glass. Maybe you opened two bottles to compare. Or maybe dinner ended earlier than expected and now there’s half a bottle sitting on the counter. The good news is that opened wine doesn’t immediately “go bad.” But it does change — and knowing how and why helps you enjoy it longer without guessing.
How to Order Wine at a Restaurant
Ordering wine at a restaurant can feel like a test you didn’t study for. The list is long. The descriptions are vague or unfamiliar. Prices climb quickly. And sometimes, the moment you hesitate, it feels like everyone at the table suddenly knows exactly what they want except for you. If that sounds familiar, you’re not alone. Even people who enjoy wine regularly feel this pressure. The good news is that ordering wine at a restaurant doesn’t require confidence, expertise, or the “right” vocabulary. It just requires a simple approach and permission to trust your own preferences.