Book a Wine Tasting Experience – Private Parties, Corporate Events & Virtual Tastings
Some of the best wine conversations I've ever had didn't happen in a tasting room. They happened around someone's kitchen table, with a group of people who'd never thought much about wine — until suddenly, they couldn't stop talking about it.
That's what a private tasting actually is. Not a lecture. Not a test. Just the right context, the right bottles, and a room full of people realizing they had opinions about wine all along.
I run private tastings for dinner parties, milestone celebrations, corporate events, team nights — whatever the occasion, the format bends to fit your group. Total beginners welcome. Seasoned drinkers welcome. The only thing I leave at the door is the snobbery.
If you're thinking about bringing something a little different to your next gathering, let's talk about what that looks like.
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Learn More About Our Educational Classes & Demos
I've sat through enough stiff, slide-deck tastings to know that the moment someone starts talking at you about wine, you stop actually tasting it. The information lands, but nothing sticks — because nothing was connected to anything real.
The classes I run work differently.
Each one takes a subject — a grape, a region, a food tradition, a cultural moment — and follows the thread all the way down. Where it comes from. Why it tastes the way it does. What it means to the people who made it. Sometimes that thread leads to a glass. Sometimes it leads to a cutting board. Usually both.
Food and wine don't exist in separate rooms. A dish changes what's in your glass. A glass changes what's on your plate. So depending on the session, you might be tasting, watching something being made, or getting your hands into it yourself. The format follows the subject — not the other way around.
Some sessions bring in guest speakers: winemakers, chefs, producers, people who've spent their lives inside a subject I've spent mine trying to understand. When that happens, you're not just learning about something — you're hearing it from someone who's lived it.
What doesn't change, whatever the format: no jargon left unexplained, no question too basic, no palate too untrained. You bring the curiosity. I'll take care of the rest.