Wine Squares
We’re back, you know the rules, and if you don’t here they are:

  1. One box is voted on per day. The current box is bolded
  2. Please don’t be a fool and comment for a different box or future box, will not count
  3. Winner is top comment after 24 hours
  4. We then advance to the next!

Top 2 runner ups will be posted in the next post!

Runner ups:

Most Underrated Wine Region
– Greece
– Loire Valley, France

Most Overrated Wine Region
– Burgundy
– Provence

Most Underrated Wine
– Barbera d’Alba
– Txakoli

Most Overrated Wine
– Meiomi
– Prisoner

Best Grape Variety
– Riesling
– Nebbiolo

Worst Grape Variety
– Muscadine
– Pinotage

Best Wine Label
– Mouton Rothschild
– Emmerich Knoll: Riesling Ried Loibenberg Smaragd

Best Newbie Friendly Wine
– Beaujolais
– Vinho Verde

Best Value Play Wine
– G.D. Vajra Langhe Nebbiolo / Barbera d’Alba
– La Rioja Alta Vina Ardanza / Vina Alberdi

Most Consistent Region
– Rioja
– Jerez

Least Consistent Region
– Okanagan Valley
– Eastern Europe / Middle East

Best Niche Grape
– Nerello Mascalase
– Furmint

Best New World Producer
– Catena Zapata
– Kumeu River

Best Sparkling Wine
– Krug
– Jacques Selosse Millésime Extra Brut Grand Cru

Biggest Unicorn Wine
– 2016 L'Exceptionnelle Vendange des Sept Domaines Montrachet
– 1945 DRC RC

by AustraliaWineDude

16 Comments

  1. Illustrious-Divide95

    Rosé to be taken seriously and recommended as a food pairing wine.

  2. Extreme-Road1588

    England will become the new Champagne due to climate change

  3. VonBassovic

    “Natural wine” craze will blow over. Please please please

  4. The overall decline in wine and alcohol consumption will accelerate beyond past levels

  5. WineNerdAndProud

    Michigan will get taken seriously with climate change. One day you’ll find yourself looking for southern MI Merlot, and northern MI sparkling and Chardonnay.

  6. Chinese wine breaks into the international market

  7. KennethParcellsworth

    Australian Fiano and Nebbiolo will become highly regarded

  8. Entire_Toe2640

    Wine consumption per capita will continue to fall because the under-30 crowd doesn’t drink alcohol, or doesn’t like wine, or can’t afford wine.

  9. DryAssumption

    At least one European country bans alcohol by 2050

  10. m0nkyman

    After the general strikes lead to a worldwide workers revolution wine prices will come down and demand will go back up.