free reicpesorder wine in a restaurantorder wine in a restaurant
SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend



order wine in a restaurant

order wine in a restaurant

Welcome! We hope your family will enjoy these delicious free recipes! Please email us your favorite recipes and cooking tips to share.
Free Recipes

Breads
Breakfast
Chocolate Recipes
Coffee Recipes
Dessert
Holidays
Kids Recipes
Main Dishes
Party
Salads
School Lunch and Snacks
Vegtables/Side Dishes

igourmet.com - LOGO

Entertaining Assortments at iGourmet.com

Join Recipe of the Month Club

How To Order Wine in a Restaurant Without Getting Gouged
By Felicia Sherbert

Many restaurant customers dread the thought of dealing with a wine list. To them, it's right there with haggling with a car salesman or selecting a fine piece of jewelry. Deep down people wonder if they are really getting a good buy.

In a restaurant situation, customers may bypass "the list" by simply asking the server for a glass of Chardonnay or Cabernet Sauvignon. While that's better than asking and settling for a glass of white or red, this is not the way to get the best bang for your buck in a restaurant.

The best way to get a good wine value at a restaurant is to become an educated consumer. You need to know a little about how restaurateurs price wines on the wine list. In a restaurant, expect to pay two to two and a half times the restaurateur's cost for a bottle of wine; in a hotel's restaurant the mark-up is easily three or more times the hotel's cost.

Very often a restaurateur will use a sliding scale pricing strategy by which the less expensive wines carry a higher mark-up and the most expensive bottles take a more modest mark-up. For example, if a restaurateur pays $6 for a bottle of wine, it could land on the wine list at anywhere from $15 to $18. A wine that costs $60 and is widely available, on the other hand, will be priced using the lower end of the scale, or about $120. It's not unusual for some restaurateurs to be gentler with the markup in order to move the wine for the sake of cash flow. After all, restaurateurs like to say, "You can't take percentages to the bank!"

(continued next column)


More About Wine

How To Order Wine in a Restaurant Without Getting Gouged

Wine Pairing 101

Warming Up to Reds

Most Popular California Wines


Free Recipes Downloads

You choice of free recipes- family meals-- home cooking-- Desserts and more
with Newsletter Sign-up

3600 Home-Cooked Meals
1000 Low Carb Diet Recipes
100 Kids Recipes
Chocolate Recipes
Delicious Italian Dishes

About the Author

free recipes

Felicia Sherbert, president of "What's My Wine?" LLC, is a leading consultant, speaker and award-winning author on wine and food. She is the author of The Unofficial Guide to Selecting Wine and the upcoming What's My Wine? Felicia conducts private and corporate wine seminars, and can be reached at whatsmywine@comcast.net.

Wine Gift Baskets


Bountiful Fruit


Grand Gourmet

Here are six strategies you can use to get the best wine for your money in a restaurant:

1. Focus for a moment on what you're in the mood for--red or white. This alone cuts the list in half.

2. Skip the house wine. Unfortunately, these wines are most often purchased on the merit of their price, not their quality. Unless you are familiar with the house wine, don't bother because they generally carry the highest mark-up.

3. Scan the list quickly to get a quick fix on the average price of a bottle. If you see that most wines are in the $20s, $30s, $40s, and so on, try to stay within this median price range where the mark-ups are "average".

4. Go with a wine from the same region as the restaurant's food specialty. A good Italian restaurant, for instance, should have a solid selection of Italian wines. Ditto for French and South American.

5. Ask the server for a wine recommendation. If you happen upon an enthusiastic server, take a chance, at least if ordering by the glass.

6. Buy by the bottle. If two or more at your table are going to have a few glasses of wine, it is cheaper to order by the bottle.


Contact Us    Advertise with us    Sitemap English    Sitemap Español      Sitemap Français     Recommended Sites     Classified's   



Copyright © 2003 - 2012, Families Online Magazine a division of Smarter Changes, LLC