How to read a wine label
The honest, no-snobbery guide to reading any wine label — what the words actually mean, which are marketing fluff, and how to read an Argentine bottle in 10 seconds.
The honest, no-snobbery guide to reading any wine label — what the words actually mean, which are marketing fluff, and how to read an Argentine bottle in 10 seconds.
The 5 chapters
01The five things that actually matter
Producer, region, grape, vintage, ABV — in that order.
Read Step 1 →ABV — the underrated signal
ABV (alcohol by volume) tells you the wine's style before you ever taste it.
Read Step 2 →The trap words (and the real ones)
Means nothing (marketing language):.
Read Step 3 →Region — specificity = quality
Bigger to smaller = lower to higher.
Read Step 4 →Front label vs back label
The front sells. The back tells.
Read Step 5 →Quick answers
What are the most important things to look for on a wine label?
Five essentials — producer, region, grape, vintage, and alcohol (ABV). These five tell you almost everything. The more specific each one is, the more confidence you can have in the wine. Marketing words like "Reserve" or "Private Selection" on US, Argentine or Australian wines have no legal meaning.
Does "Reserve" on a wine label mean anything?
It depends on the country. "Reserva" in Spain and "Riserva" in Italy are legal terms requiring specific extra aging. "Reserve" in the US, Argentina, Chile and Australia is generally just marketing.
What does ABV tell you on a wine label?
ABV (alcohol by volume) gives the wine's style before tasting. Under 11% = light, often off-dry. 12.5–13.5% = medium-bodied, balanced. 13.5–14.5% = full-bodied and ripe (most Argentine Malbec). Over 14.5% = big and warm-climate. Note: labels can legally round ABV by up to 1.5%, so it's a useful range, not an exact number.
What does "Estate Bottled" mean?
The producer grew the grapes, made the wine, and bottled it themselves — all on their own property. A legal designation in most countries and generally a good quality signal.
How do I read an Argentine wine label?
Same five essentials as anywhere — but look for the region hierarchy (Province → Region → Sub-region). "Mendoza" is broad; "Uco Valley" or "Luján de Cuyo" is more specific; named sub-regions like "Gualtallary" or "Paraje Altamira" are typically the most serious. Two regions — Luján de Cuyo and San Rafael — have the DOC designation, the strictest Argentine quality category.