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« Wine of the week: Frei Bros. Sauvignon Blanc Reserve 2006 | Main | A few more notes from the Texas Zagat survey »

March 21, 2008

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Most restaurateurs should really have a collection plate for donations from customers, since (apparently) they claim they have a tough time paying the bills with a mere 300% markup on wine!
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Many seem to prefer to sell a beer for $5, rather than have people order a bottle of wine (and maybe clear a $20 profit) that's sensibly-priced.
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Many wineries offer restaurants a "by the glass" price. This allows the restaurateur to jack up the price in hopes of attracting a customer. One winery here in California offered is $35 (retail bottle price) to restaurants for $120/case (of twelve bottles). This is an extreme example, but the wine business bends over backwards for dining establishments.
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Many restaurants seem to have difficulty in even printing a wine list with the name of the winery or type of wine spelled correctly (or categorized properly).
One new dining establishment is so sloppy, they have the same wine listed twice and at different prices!
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Numerous winery marketing people continue to use a sales 'model' developed in the 1970s, despite the fact that the world has changed significantly.
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The Zagat guide is used by many wineries to target prospective restaurant accounts. They all want to have their wines in the most fancy, highly-rated places. A wine broker told me one vintner demanded to have their $40 Pinot Noir in a particular, highly-rated restaurant. The broker agreed to present the wine to this restaurant, but told the winemaker "it's not likely they will be interested in your Pinot Noir since they're open only for breakfast and lunch."
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I live in Italy so I suppose this input is not valid, but you're correct. The wine culture here is inbedded since before the Roman Empire. In restaurants, have paid less than EUR 10 and up to EUR 28 for a very good bottle of wine here. Go into any restaurant for dinner and you will find from 60% to 100% of the tables with a bottle of wine on them.

An interesting but tangent point is that a mean in Europe is usually at least 3 courses which renders wine more important to the meal. Many American meals have the entire dinner plopped onto the table at once and that makes it a bit harder to enjoy a meal and enjoying a meal more is what wine is all about, so perhaps until Americans learn how to eat correctly, wine will never rise to it's correct place in the market because it does not have the right role in a meal.

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