Wine toast Photo by Matthieu Joannon on Unsplash

What You’ve Accomplished

This week you built a foundation in:

  • Major wine regions — Old World (France, Italy, Spain, Germany, Portugal) and New World (Americas, Australia, NZ, South Africa)
  • Climate zones — how cool, moderate, and warm climates produce fundamentally different wines
  • Terroir — soil, elevation, aspect, and why place matters
  • Practical tasting — comparing wines side by side to see theory in action

Key Takeaways

Old World vs. New World at a Glance

  Old World New World
Labels Named by region (“Sancerre”) Named by grape (“Sauvignon Blanc”)
Philosophy Tradition, terroir, regulation Innovation, fruit expression, freedom
Style Subtle, earthy, structured Bold, fruit-forward, approachable
Regulations Strict (what grapes, where, how) Flexible
Learning curve Higher — you need to know the code Lower — the grape is on the label

Climate Quick Reference

Climate Acidity Fruit Style Alcohol Body
Cool High Red berries, citrus 11-13% Light-medium
Moderate Balanced Mixed fruit 13-14% Medium
Warm Softer Dark fruit, jammy 14-15%+ Medium-full

Your Terroir Checklist

Next time you taste a wine, ask yourself:

  • What region is this from? What’s the climate like there?
  • Can I taste the climate? (High acid = cool, soft/ripe = warm)
  • Is there a mineral or earthy character? (Possible soil influence)
  • Does the label tell me anything about the specific vineyard or sub-region?

Dinner Party Cheat Sheet

Five things you can confidently say this week:

  1. On Bordeaux: “It’s always a blend — Left Bank is Cabernet-dominant, Right Bank is Merlot-dominant.”
  2. On Burgundy: “It’s just Pinot Noir or Chardonnay, but the specific vineyard plot determines everything.”
  3. On climate: “Check the alcohol on the label — it tells you a lot about where the wine is from. Higher alcohol usually means a warmer region.”
  4. On Malbec: “It’s actually a French grape that nearly went extinct. Argentina rescued it.”
  5. On value: “Portugal and Chile are the best value wine countries in the world right now.”

Coming Up: Week 2

Sparkling Wines & Fortified Wines

  • The three methods of sparkling production (traditional, tank, ancestral)
  • Champagne vs. Crémant vs. Cava vs. Prosecco — what’s the difference?
  • Port, Sherry, Madeira — the fortified wine world
  • When and how to serve sparkling (hint: it’s not just for celebrations)

Resources

Books Worth Owning

  • “Wine Folly: The Essential Guide to Wine” by Madeline Puckette & Justin Hammack — beautiful visuals, very accessible
  • “The World Atlas of Wine” by Hugh Johnson & Jancis Robinson — the definitive reference
  • “Wine for Dummies” by Ed McCarthy & Mary Ewing-Mulligan — no shame, it’s actually good

Video / Online

  • Wine Folly (YouTube): Clear, visual explanations
  • WSET Bite-size: Free tasting technique videos from the Wine & Spirit Education Trust
  • Wine Library TV: Gary Vaynerchuk’s original wine show — entertaining and educational

Practice Habits

  • Keep a simple tasting log (even just notes in your phone)
  • When dining out, try one wine you’ve never had before
  • Ask wine shop staff what’s exciting them right now
  • Start noticing alcohol percentage on labels — it tells you a lot about the wine

Week 1 Quiz

Test yourself — answers are hidden below each question.

  1. What French region is the benchmark for Pinot Noir?
    AnswerBurgundy (Bourgogne)
  2. What does GDD stand for, and what does it measure?
    AnswerGrowing Degree Days — measures heat accumulation during the growing season
  3. What soil type is the Bordeaux Left Bank famous for?
    AnswerGravel (the Graves region is literally named for it)
  4. Name two great New World regions for Pinot Noir.
    AnswerWillamette Valley (Oregon), Central Otago (New Zealand), Sonoma Coast / Santa Barbara (California)
  5. What is Chile’s signature grape, and what’s its unusual story?
    AnswerCarmenère — it was thought extinct in Bordeaux, then rediscovered in Chile in 1994 where it had been mislabeled as Merlot for decades
  6. What’s the difference between Blanc de Blancs and Blanc de Noirs Champagne?
    AnswerBlanc de Blancs = 100% Chardonnay. Blanc de Noirs = 100% red grapes (Pinot Noir and/or Pinot Meunier), but the wine is still white.
  7. What climate produces wines with higher acidity and lower alcohol?
    AnswerCool climate
  8. What country has more land under vine than any other?
    AnswerSpain
  9. Why is Argentine Malbec grown at such high altitude?
    AnswerThe Andes create a rain shadow (dry conditions), and the altitude provides UV intensity for thick skins plus cool nights to preserve acidity. Snowmelt provides irrigation.
  10. What does “terroir” mean?
    AnswerThe complete environmental picture of where wine is grown — climate, soil, topography, microclimate, and (sometimes) human tradition.

Great job completing Week 1! You now know more about wine geography than most people who “love wine.” Next week: bubbles and fortified wines.


Last updated: March 2026