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03

Starter lesson · 7 min read

How to read a wine label.

Old World labels tell you where. New World labels tell you what. Once you know which language a bottle is speaking, the rest of the information falls into place.

A wine label is a small legal document pretending to be marketing. Every word on it is there because some authority — a French AOC committee, a Tuscan DOCG, an Australian state, a US federal regulator — required it to be. Learn what those required words mean and you can read any bottle in the world in about ten seconds.

The single most useful idea in label-reading is the divide between Old World and New World.

Old World — the label tells you where

In Europe, the assumption is that you know which grape grows in which place. So the label leads with the place, and you are expected to infer the grape.

Take a bottle of Sancerre. The word "Sancerre" is the producer's appellation — a small region in the eastern Loire. By French law, white Sancerre must be 100% Sauvignon Blanc. The grape is not on the label because it does not have to be. You are expected to know.

Or a bottle of Chablis: 100% Chardonnay, by appellation law. Or Brunello di Montalcino: 100% Sangiovese. Or Hermitage red: 100% Syrah. The place tells you the grape.

What to look for on an Old World label

New World — the label tells you what

Outside Europe — the United States, Australia, New Zealand, Chile, Argentina, South Africa — the convention reverses. The label leads with the grape, because no one is born knowing what grows in Mendoza or Marlborough. The place is included, but secondary.

"Cloudy Bay Sauvignon Blanc, Marlborough, 2024." Producer, grape, region, vintage. Direct and explicit. No prior knowledge required.

What to look for on a New World label

The information that's always on the label

Regardless of where the wine is from, every bottle must, by international agreement, declare:

What to remember

Old World labels lead with where; New World labels lead with what. The producer's name is always the most important word. On US imports, the importer is the second most important word. Hierarchy markers (Premier Cru, Grand Cru, Riserva, single vineyard) are legally defined upgrades worth learning by region.

The eight-second method

  1. Is this Old World or New World? (That sets your reading order.)
  2. Who is the producer? (The most important word.)
  3. What region or appellation? (Place plus classification.)
  4. What vintage? (Recent or aged? Strong or weak year?)
  5. What grape — explicit or implied?
  6. Any hierarchy or quality markers?
  7. ABV — what style does that suggest?
  8. Importer? (On US bottles, this is your curation signal.)

Done in less than ten seconds, with practice. We will run this exact drill in any tasting we host.