Explorer’s Club: April 2026

2022 Kumeu River Village Pinot Noir, Kumeu, New Zealand

The Moment

Some Pinot Noirs are built around depth.
Others are built around brightness.

The 2022 Kumeu River Village Pinot Noir is the kind of bottle that leans fully into freshness — lifted red fruit, cool energy, and just enough chalky grip to keep things feeling clean and complete. The winery describes a bright cherry red/burgundy color with lifted red fruit aromas, and says the palate is cool, round, and fruity with a hint of chalky tannin that keeps the wine dry and refreshing. That is a very good summary of what makes this bottle so useful: it is easy to like, but not soft or vague.

This wine sits in a great lane for customers who want Pinot Noir that feels light on its feet without becoming thin. Kumeu River matures it for 7 months in a mix of neutral old barrels and stainless steel, which helps preserve fruit purity while giving the wine a little shape. Bright red cherry and juicy raspberry with a chalky edge, soft tannins, and a long finish, which fits the style very well.

What It Feels Like

Think roast salmon, a table in the backyard, a bottle opened a little cooler than room temperature, and a red that feels refreshing enough to keep pouring.

What makes this wine work is the combination of fruit and restraint. You get cherry and raspberry-toned Pinot charm, but the wine stays dry, chalky, and clean rather than plush. An engaging raspberry-like fruitiness, an intriguing subtle savory component, and wonderful acidity that keeps it fresh and lively. That is exactly the appeal here: friendly fruit, real lift, and enough savoriness to make it more than just a simple weeknight red.

In the Glass

Aromatics
Lifted red fruit, cherry, raspberry, and a lightly savory, floral edge.

Palate
Cool red fruit, juicy cherry and raspberry, with a dry, refreshing line and a subtle chalky note.

Texture
Light- to medium-bodied, round but fresh, with soft tannins and a fine chalky grip.

Finish
Dry, lively, and gently savory, with red fruit and a chalky mineral edge lingering through the close.

Why We Love This Bottle

Pinot Noir That Stays Refreshing
This is a red-fruited Pinot that keeps its shape. The chalky tannin and bright acidity stop it from drifting into softness.

Easygoing, But Not Simple
Round and fruity is part of the charm, but the subtle savory note and dry finish give it more presence than many entry-level Pinot Noirs.

A Very Good Bottle To Have Around
This is exactly the kind of Pinot that can bridge a lot of situations — weeknight dinner, slightly chilled on a warmer evening, or a red for people who say they do not want anything too heavy.

Pair It With

• Salmon
• Roast chicken
• Mushroom dishes
• Burgers
• Charcuterie

These are my pairing recommendations based on the wine’s bright red fruit, fresh acidity, light body, and dry chalky finish. The critic note specifically suggests grilled tuna or salmon, which fits the style well.

Technical Notes

Producer: Kumeu River
Cuvée: Village Pinot Noir
Region: Kumeu, New Zealand
Grape: Pinot Noir
Alcohol: 12.5%

Winemaking: Aged 7 months in a mix of neutral, 5+ year old barrels and stainless steel tank.

Body: Light-Medium
Structure: Soft tannins · bright acidity · chalky dry finish

Flavor Profile
Cherry · Raspberry · Red Fruit · Chalk · Subtle Savory Notes

Drink Window
Now–2028

2023 Torres “Pago del Cielo” Celeste Verdejo, Rueda, Spain

The Moment

Some whites are built around simple refreshment.
Others bring refreshment with a little more shape.

The 2023 Torres “Pago del Cielo” Celeste Verdejo lands beautifully in that second category — bright and energetic, but with enough texture and mineral detail to make it feel complete at the table. This is a wine with fresh herbs, lemon peel, and a distinct mineral note, while the palate brings citrus, especially tangerine, with a silky texture. This has a very classic Rueda frame: fennel, coriander, and green gooseberries, with a palate that is fresh, tangy, dry, and zesty.

This is not a broad, tropical, easygoing white. It feels cleaner, more herbal, and more lifted than that. Fennel, anise, citrus, and mineral notes, sometimes with subtle pineapple, mango, peach, or floral accents, which fits nicely with the idea of Verdejo as a white that can be both refreshing and quietly layered.

What It Feels Like

Think salty snacks on the table, late sun, a bottle that wakes up the whole meal, and a white that feels more like a reset button than a centerpiece.

What makes this wine work is the way it balances herbal freshness with just enough roundness underneath. Silky on the palate, sur lie aging and vibrant acidity, which helps explain why the wine feels crisp without turning sharp or thin. That makes it a very useful bottle: easy to open on its own, but still substantial enough for seafood, tapas, or lighter dinners.

In the Glass

Aromatics
Fresh herbs, lemon peel, fennel, coriander, green gooseberry, and a distinct mineral note.

Palate
Citrus-driven and dry, with tangerine, lemony freshness, and a subtle stone-fruit or tropical accent depending on the source.

Texture
Silky and smooth through the middle, but lifted by bright acidity and a zesty, refreshing line.

Finish
Dry, tangy, and mineral, with citrus and herbal notes lingering through the close.

Why We Love This Bottle

Classic Rueda Energy
Fennel, herbs, citrus, gooseberry, and mineral freshness is a very convincing Verdejo profile, and this bottle seems to hit that lane cleanly.

Refreshing, But Not Empty
The silky texture and sur lie handling give the wine a little more presence than a simple porch-pounder white, which is part of what makes it so useful in a shop.

A Great Food White
The combination of herbal freshness, dry citrus, and mineral line makes this the kind of bottle that works naturally with tapas, seafood, and salty snacks.

Pair It With

• Seafood paella
• Grilled fish
• Tinned fish and crusty bread
• Pan con tomate
• Salty cheeses and tapas

These pairings are based on the wine’s citrus-herbal-mineral profile and on merchant suggestions tied to the current release.

Technical Notes

Producer: Familia Torres / Pago del Cielo
Region: DO Rueda, Spain
Grape: Verdejo
Style: Sur lie Verdejo / modern, fresh, aromatic white

Winemaking: Lees aging for added texture, with wine aged on its lees for a minimum of 4 months.

Body: Light-Medium
Structure: Bright acidity · silky texture · dry mineral finish

Flavor Profile
Lemon Peel · Tangerine · Fennel · Coriander · Green Gooseberry · Mineral Notes

Drink Window
Now–2027

2023 Bernard Latour Domaine de l’Espigouette Côtes du Rhône Rosé, France

The Moment

Some rosés are built around fruit.
Others are built around freshness with a little edge.

The 2023 Bernard Latour Domaine de l’Espigouette Côtes du Rhône Rosé feels like the second kind — bright, easy, and immediately welcoming, but with enough mineral snap to keep it from drifting into softness. It is as a blend of Grenache, Syrah, and Cinsault, with strawberry, raspberry, citrus, minerality, and salinity, and a finish that stays clean and refreshing.

This is the kind of Southern Rhône rosé that works because it does not overcomplicate things. It feels sunny and food-friendly, built more around drinkability than perfume or richness.

What It Feels Like

Think a table outside, salty snacks already opened, somebody setting down grilled vegetables or seafood, and a rosé that makes the whole evening feel easier.

What makes this bottle work is the balance between juicy red-fruit charm and a cleaner, more mineral finish. You get the friendliness people want from rosé, but also a little salinity and citrus that keep the wine feeling crisp and awake. This is less of a floral patio rosé and more like a versatile, dry Rhône pink you can actually keep at the table through dinner.

In the Glass

Aromatics
Strawberry, raspberry, and a light citrus lift.

Palate
Fresh red berries with hints of citrus, minerality, and a subtle saline edge.

Texture
Light-bodied, dry, and easygoing, with enough shape to feel complete at the table. This textural summary is based on the retailer descriptions and the stated mineral finish.

Finish
Clean, citrusy, and mineral, with a refreshing close.

Why We Love This Bottle

A Rhône Rosé That Stays Fresh
The strawberry-and-raspberry fruit is there, but the minerality and salinity keep it from feeling sweet or simple.

Easy To Open, Easy To Finish
This sounds like exactly the kind of bottle that works as an apéritif but still holds its own once food arrives.

A Great Warm-Weather Table Wine
The profile is straightforward in the best way: red fruit, citrus, freshness, and a little Rhône character underneath.

Pair It With

• Niçoise salad
• Grilled shrimp
• Salmon
• Provençal vegetables
• Goat cheese

These are my pairing recommendations based on the wine’s red-berry fruit, citrus freshness, and mineral-saline finish. This rosé also points toward pork, poultry, shellfish, and richer fish like salmon or tuna.

Technical Notes

Producer: Bernard Latour / Domaine de l’Espigouette
Region: Côtes du Rhône, Rhône Valley, France
Grapes: Grenache, Syrah, Cinsault

Body: Light
Structure: Bright acidity · mineral line · refreshing finish

Flavor Profile
Strawberry · Raspberry · Citrus · Mineral · Salinity

Drink Window
Now–2026
That is my recommendation based on the wine’s fresh, aperitif-driven rosé style and the retailer guidance to serve it immediately and enjoy its charm young.

2024 Galactica Cabernet Sauvignon, Central Valley, Chile

The Moment

Some Cabernets are built around sheer power.
Others are built around shape.

The 2024 Galactica Cabernet Sauvignon lands in a very appealing middle space — dark-fruited and generous, but held together by enough savory detail and fine tannin to keep it from feeling heavy. Dark cherry, plum, and rhubarb with cigar box, clove, eucalyptus, and leather, while the finish brings in blackberry, dark chocolate, ripe currants, and baking spice. The oak is well integrated, which feels exactly right here: present enough to frame the fruit, but not trying to dominate it.

What makes this bottle work is that it feels polished without becoming glossy. Galactica’s Cabernet is made by the winemaking team of Ricardo Baettig and Daniela Salinas, and the broader house profile points toward fruit from cool Chilean microclimates with large diurnal temperature shifts and granitic/alluvial soils, which helps explain the wine’s balance between ripeness and freshness. 85% Cabernet Sauvignon and 15% Syrah.

What It Feels Like

Think grilled steak, dusk settling in, a bottle that feels more expensive than it is, and a red that gives you plenty of Cabernet character without becoming stern or overbuilt.

What makes this wine easy to recommend is the way it moves between dark fruit and more savory, grown-up notes. You get plum, blackberry, and currant, but also eucalyptus, leather, clove, and cigar box, which gives the wine more personality than a simple fruit-first Cab. The tannins are described as soft and fine-grained, and that feels like a big part of the appeal here: it has structure, but it is still very easy to pour.

In the Glass

Aromatics
Dark cherry, plum, rhubarb, cigar box, clove, eucalyptus, and leather.

Palate
Blackberry, ripe currants, dark cherry, dark chocolate, baking spice, and savory herbal tones.

Texture
Medium-bodied with soft, fine-grained tannins and a sleek, approachable feel.

Finish
Fruit-driven but savory on the close, with spice, dark fruit, and oak sitting in balance.

Why We Love This Bottle

Cabernet With More Than Just Fruit
The dark cherry and plum are generous, but the real charm is in the secondary notes — cigar box, leather, eucalyptus, and spice — that make the wine feel a little more complete.

Approachable, But Still Structured
Soft, fine-grained tannins keep this easy to drink, while the Syrah in the blend seems to help bring extra spice and dark-fruit depth. That last point is an inference from the published blend and tasting profile.

A Very Good Dinner Red
This is exactly the kind of bottle that feels versatile: steak night, burgers, roast meat, aged cheese, or a table that wants Cabernet without paying Napa pricing. Pairing suggestions include grilled steak, rosemary lamb, roasted portobello mushrooms, and aged cheddar.

Pair It With

• Grilled steak
• Rosemary lamb
• Roasted portobello mushrooms
• Burgers
• Aged cheddar

Technical Notes

Producer: Galactica
Region: Central Valley, Chile
Grapes: 85% Cabernet Sauvignon, 15% Syrah
Winemakers: Ricardo Baettig and Daniela Salinas
Farming: Vineyard and winery listed as certified sustainable.

Vineyard / Soils: Fruit is coming from a cool microclimate with large diurnal temperature shifts, at 985m elevation, on mostly granitic and alluvial soils.

Winemaking: All fruit destemmed; cool fermentation in stainless steel tanks; then into 225L neutral barrel; aged 6 months before bottling.

Body: Medium
Structure: Fine-grained tannins · integrated oak · fruit-driven finish
This structural summary is based on the published tasting and production notes.

Flavor Profile
Dark Cherry · Plum · Rhubarb · Cigar Box · Clove · Eucalyptus · Leather · Blackberry · Dark Chocolate

Drink Window
Now–2029

2025 Bodega Norton “Tiny Whale” Sauvignon Blanc, Argentina

The Moment

Some Sauvignon Blancs are built around sharpness.
Others are built around freshness with a softer landing.

The 2025 Bodega Norton “Tiny Whale” Sauvignon Blanc feels like the kind of bottle made for exactly that second lane — bright, citrusy, and herbal, but not severe. A pale yellow color and greenish hues, plus intense aromas of citrus and herbs, especially pink grapefruit and rue. On the palate, it is fresh and fruity with an elegant, balanced finish, which makes it sound immediately useful at the table.

This is not a dense, tropical Sauvignon Blanc trying to impress with weight. It reads cleaner than that: more grapefruit, herbs, and lift than lush fruit. High-altitude vineyards and a style meant to feel vibrant and expressive.

What It Feels Like

Think a bowl of salty chips on the table, something quick coming off the grill, and a white that wakes everything up without demanding too much attention.

What makes this bottle appealing is its simplicity in the best sense. You get citrus, herbs, freshness, and enough balance to make it easy to come back to for another glass.

In the Glass

Aromatics
Citrus, fresh herbs, pink grapefruit, and rue.

Palate
Fresh and fruity, with citrusy lift and an easy, balanced shape.

Texture
Light-bodied and refreshing, with a clean, uncomplicated flow.

Finish
Elegant, balanced, and crisp, with citrus and herbs lingering through the close. This finish summary is based on the available tasting descriptions.

Why We Love This Bottle

Straightforward In A Good Way
This is the kind of white that does not need a long speech. Citrus, herbs, freshness, and balance is already a very good place to start.

A Crowd-Friendly Sauvignon Blanc
The profile looks built for easy drinking: bright grapefruit, herbal lift, and enough polish on the finish to keep it from feeling harsh.

A Very Useful Bottle To Have Cold
This feels like a great fridge white — the kind of bottle that works before dinner, with lighter food, or whenever the table just wants something bright and clean.

Pair It With

• Grilled shrimp
• Goat cheese
• Herbed chicken
• Salads with citrus vinaigrette
• Chips, olives, and salty snacks

Technical Notes

Producer: Bodega Norton / Tiny Whale
Region: Argentina
Grape: Sauvignon Blanc
Alcohol: 12.5%

Style: Bright, citrusy, herbal Sauvignon Blanc from high-altitude vineyard sourcing.

Body: Light
Structure: Bright acidity · fresh fruit · balanced finish

Flavor Profile
Pink Grapefruit · Citrus · Fresh Herbs · Rue

Drink Window
Now–2027

Luchador Tempranillo · Toro, Spain · 2022

The Moment

This is the bottle you open when dinner stops being casual.

The pan is hot, something smoky is coming off the stove, and someone pours a red that smells like black fruit, spice, and just enough swagger to make the night feel like it’s headed somewhere.

That’s the energy of the 2022 Luchador Tempranillo.

Dark-fruited, smooth, and built with the kind of bold Spanish confidence that makes grilled food, loud laughter, and one-more-glass decisions feel inevitable.


What It Feels Like

You’re in one of Spain’s boldest Tempranillo zones — where the grape often shows up darker, denser, and more structured than in Rioja, with ripe black fruit, spice, and earthy depth.

This bottle leans into that lane beautifully: ripe fruit, savory edges, and a smooth, easy-drinking finish that still carries some muscle.

It’s the kind of red that feels right when the playlist gets better and the food gets more serious.


In the Glass

Aromatics
Blackberry, black cherry, plum, warm spice, and a hint of earth.

Palate
Dark fruit up front, followed by cocoa, subtle pepper, and a gently savory edge.

Texture
Medium-to-medium-plus body with smooth tannins and an easy, polished feel.

Finish
Supple, warm, and quietly persistent with a little spice on the back end.


Why We Love This Bottle

Spanish Crowd Energy
This is a red that overdelivers for the table — expressive, easy to love, and built for food.

Tempranillo With a Darker Edge
Compared to lighter, more lifted examples, this style leans richer and more grounded.

A Great “Bring This to Dinner” Bottle
Approachable enough for casual drinkers, interesting enough for wine people.

This is one of those bottles that gets poured once… and suddenly everyone wants to know what it is.


Pair It With

• Burgers off the grill
• Chorizo or tapas
• Roast chicken with paprika
• Steak tacos
• Manchego and charcuterie


Technical Notes

Producer / Label: Luchador (The Grateful Palate)
Region: Toro, Spain

Grape: Tempranillo

Body: Medium–Plus
Acidity: Balanced

Flavor Profile
Blackberry · Black Cherry · Plum · Cocoa · Spice

Serving Temperature
58–64°F

Drink Window
Now–2028