NWLB Master Report — Women in Wine Festival 2026
New York City · March 2026 · Festival Report
Women in Wine Festival

This past March, we brought 125 guests to Le Du Wines for the Women in Wine Festival — a fully blind tasting of 55 wines from 14 countries, every single one made, led, or owned by a woman. No labels. Just everyday consumers, real reactions, and a room full of women pouring what they built. This is what they thought.

Welcome to the WiW Report

This report breaks down the Women in Wine Festival results from every angle — the numbers, the patterns, and what it all means. Inside you'll find Festival Highlights (the stats worth stopping for), the NWLB × Le Du Shelf (the six wines that earned a spot at Le Du Wines), Findings (broader themes rooted in what the data is actually saying), Meet the Women (every woman behind every bottle), and the Festival Rankings (top 25 wines, ranked blind).

A big thank you to our partners for being part of making this festival what it was: Le Dû Wines, Colangelo & Partners, Winesellers Ltd., Marquee Selections, Carnelia, China Wine Club, NJ Winemakers Co-Op, Kapistoni Winery, Mai Vino, ECR Vintners, Happy Boards, and GoVino.

All Wines
By the Numbers
Festival Highlights
Where the data landed.
GERMANY was the top-performing country
Germany led all countries — both Rieslings in the top 7, highest Memorability score, and best value overperformance of the festival.
Top 3 wines OUTPERFORMED their value by +49.9%
On average, the top three wines were perceived as worth 49.9% more than they actually cost.
"BRIGHT" was the room's most-chosen descriptor
With 24 mentions, Bright was the most common guest descriptor — NYC drinkers go fresh and acid-forward first.
Memorability and Purchase Intent correlate at 85%
Across NWLB events, the wines people remember are almost always the wines they want to buy.
14 Countries
Argentina Austria Bulgaria Chile China France Georgia Germany Italy New Zealand Portugal South Africa Spain USA
No Wine Left BehindLe Du Wines
The Six Wines on the NWLB × Le Du Shelf
NWLB and Le Du Wines came together to put six of the festival's strongest performances directly in front of New York City consumers. Every wine on this shelf earned its placement through blind tasting — chosen because they performed, because they tell a story worth telling, and because the women behind them deserve their wine on a New York shelf. Look for them at Le Du Wines, 600 Washington Street.

Now available at Le Du Wines → shop the shelf

2021 Georg Albrecht Schneider Paterberg Riesling Kabinett
Ursula Müller · Rheinhessen, Germany
100% Riesling (Kabinett-style)
Retail: $18
Top Descriptors Juicy Rich
2021 Georg Albrecht Schneider Paterberg Riesling Kabinett
#1 of 55
Memorability
3.87/5
Purchase Intent
3.8/5
Dinner Party
3.8/5
MATURATION
Stainless steel
Terroir / Soils
12+ acre Paterberg vineyard; red sandstone and lime-driven chalk soils. Riesling thrives in rocky and chalk-rich sites.
Viticulture
Sustainable farming
"I love that this grape variety [Riesling] has a different expression everywhere — that origin is simply what shapes everything."
— Ursula Müller
Ursula is the 9th generation of the Schneider family, founded in 1806 when her ancestor bought vineyards Napoleon was selling off to fund his war campaigns. She studied business administration, worked at a pharmaceutical company, and came back in 2011 when her siblings had no interest.
2024 Pine Ridge Chenin Blanc-Viognier
Colleen FitzGerald · Clarksburg & Lodi, California, USA
80% Chenin Blanc, 20% Viognier
Retail: $16
Top Descriptors Bright Juicy
2024 Pine Ridge Chenin Blanc-Viognier
#2 of 55
Memorability
3.6/5
Purchase Intent
3.67/5
Dinner Party
3.73/5
MATURATION
100% stainless steel — zero oak contact
Terroir / Soils
Clarksburg (Chenin Blanc): Sacramento River Delta; warm climate moderated by constant Delta breeze, preserving freshness and acidity. Lodi (Viognier): warm inland region known for ripe, aromatic whites.
Viticulture
certified Napa Green
"I have always been captivated by the perfect balance of chemistry and art in winemaking.Once you discover it, there is no going back."
— Colleen FitzGerald
Pine Ridge Vineyards founded in 1978 by Gary Andrus — a former US ski team downhill skier. Colleen FitzGerald joined Pine Ridge as a harvest lab intern in 2013, worked her way up over a decade, and by 2021 was leading the CB+V program.
2024 OTU Estate Sauvignon Blanc
Anna Remond · Awatere Valley, Marlborough, New Zealand
100% Sauvignon Blanc
Retail: $19
Top Descriptors Juicy Earthy
2024 OTU Estate Sauvignon Blanc
#3 of 55
Memorability
3.6/5
Purchase Intent
3.55/5
Dinner Party
3.65/5
Viticulture
Minimal intervention
Terroir / Soils
Awatere Valley, Marlborough — cooler, windier sub-region known for intense, precise Sauvignon Blanc.
"Our wine style is all about letting the wine speak truly of the land where it is grown, with minimal intervention."
— Anna Remond
She trained in two of France's most iconic regions — Sancerre and Burgundy — bringing that Old World precision back to New Zealand's wildest coastal terroir.

Anna grew up with a rural background in Canterbury, New Zealand — and became one of the country's most respected white winemakers, spending 15 years heading up the white wine program at one of New Zealand's largest wineries.

Anna is a mentor for the Women in Wine Programme in New Zealand, actively supporting the next generation of women winemakers in Marlborough and beyond.
2025 Santa Julia 'La Mantis' Pet Nat Sparkling
Sebastián Zuccardi · Maipú, Mendoza, Argentina
100% Chardonnay
Retail: $23
Top Descriptors Crisp Bright
2025 Santa Julia La Mantis Pet Nat Sparkling
#9 of 55
Memorability
3.43/5
Purchase Intent
3.36/5
Dinner Party
3.79/5
FERMENTATION
Ancestral method (pet-nat)
Viticulture
Certified organic
"Our family has always valued caring for the land we live on. And I understand this vision to include people."
— Julia Zuccardi
The winery was named after Julia at age 12. Her grandmother Emma ran the estate's social responsibility program until age 94. Julia took over before she passed and now oversees the estate's Fair for Life certification, daycare program, and community initiatives.
2022 Silver Heights The Last Warrior Red
Emma Gao · Ningxia, China
80% Cabernet Sauvignon, 20% Merlot
Retail: $30
Top Descriptors Bold Earthy
2022 Silver Heights The Last Warrior Red
#13 of 55
Memorability
3.52/5
Purchase Intent
3.41/5
Dinner Party
3.48/5
MATURATION
12 months in 70% old French oak
Terroir / Soils
Dry continental; limestone soils
Viticulture
Biodynamic (Demeter)
"My feeling for winemaking stems in large part from my deep knowledge of the complex geological and social terroir of northern Ningxia.[It's] something I carry in my bones."
— Emma Gao
A 2017 spinal injury led Emma to traditional Chinese medicine — and transformed her entire philosophy. She connected biodynamic farming with the ancient 24 Jieqi solar terms and Tai Chi, and Silver Heights became China's first Demeter-certified biodynamic winery in 2023.
2020 Backsberg Pumphouse Shiraz
Alicia Rechner · Western Cape, South Africa
100% Shiraz
Retail: $24
Top Descriptors Earthy Smooth
2020 Backsberg Pumphouse Shiraz
#15 of 55
Memorability
3.4/5
Purchase Intent
3.33/5
Dinner Party
3.4/5
MATURATION
14 months in small French and American oak barriques
Terroir / Soils
Paarl region; slopes of the Simonsberg mountain. Sandy, well-draining soils.
Viticulture
Certified carbon neutral (2006)
"Each vintage tells a story of place and purpose."
— Alicia Rechner
Alicia Rechner's philosophy: minimal intervention; if quality isn't achieved in the vineyard first, the cellar can't fix it.
The Findings
What the Data Is Telling Us
Five festival-level takeaways.
RIESLING'S DOUBLE MOMENT
NYC wine drinkers fell hard for Riesling — and didn't even know it.
Georg Albrecht Schneider's Paterberg Riesling Kabinett, made by Ursula Muller & her husband Steffan, ranked #1 of 55 wines and posted the festival's highest Memorability score.
Read more +

Riesling tends to live in the sommelier-and-food pairing corner. The grape that wine professionals gush over (reasonably so) and yet the grape that most mainstream drinkers walk past. That isn't what happened here. Georg Albrecht Schneider's Paterberg Riesling Kabinett, made by Ursula Muller & her husband Steffen, ranked #1 of 55 wines and posted the festival's highest Memorability score. Their Vom Kalk Riesling landed at #7. Regular NYC wine drinkers, when tasting blind, picked a small-production Riesling. Twice!

Ursula is the 9th generation of the Schneider family. She never planned to be a winemaker — she studied business administration, went to work at a pharmaceutical company, and only came back in 2011 when her siblings had no interest in taking over. She merged the estate with her husband Steffen's in 2015. Her favorite vineyard is the Hipping — she was there as a little girl when it was planted, and every harvest, the crew ends the season there with a meal in the field and a song together.

Guests valued the Paterberg at 66.7% more than its $18 retail — the single largest value overperformance in the festival. Great Riesling can have a reputation for being expensive, or inaccessible. But $18 for the #1 wine in a blind tasting of 55? That's gold. If there's one thing this festival proved about Riesling — and it proved a lot — it's that the grape's QPR can be truly unmatched.

2021 Georg Albrecht Schneider Paterberg Riesling Kabinett 2021 Georg Albrecht Schneider Vom Kalk Riesling
THE CLASSICS ENDURE
Pinot Noir is still that grape.
Pinot Noir was the top-performing red grape across all wines (5 bottles, average rank 19.4). McCollum Heritage 91 was a particular stunner, landing at #10.
Read more +

We've recently noticed a trending storyline that Pinot Noir has been overdone — too popular for too long, too expensive — looking at you, Burgundy — and Gamay is the new Pinot Noir. (And no Gamay hate here, we love a Cru Bojo!) In certain wine circles, Pinot Noir is sometimes dismissed as too traditional, especially when obscure varietals and crunchy new reds are in the room.

So what does the actual data say? Are young wine drinkers tired of queen pinot? Well… maybe not. At least the festival data didn't read that way. Pinot Noir was the top-performing red grape across all wines (5 bottles, average rank 19.4). McCollum Heritage 91 was a particular stunner, landing at #10. So the results are in — people still love a great glass of Pinot.

And maybe the wider story is that people still love the classics. That tracks with what we saw at the festival. A New Zealand Sauvignon Blanc at #3, a Tuscan Sangiovese at #5, a Macon Chardonnay at #8. NWLB will keep championing the obscure grapes, the off-grid regions, the minimal-intervention bottles — but when the room tastes blind, sometimes the answer is the one wine writers stopped writing about because everyone already knew. There's a reason the classics are the classics.

2022 McCollum Heritage 91 Pinot Noir 2023 Archery Summit Dundee Hills Pinot Noir
THE COMEBACK KID
Off-dry wines are having a moment — the data says so.
The top two wines at this festival were both off-dry. Georg Albrecht Schneider's Paterberg Riesling Kabinett at #1. Pine Ridge's Chenin Blanc + Viognier at #2.
Read more +

There's a word that still makes certain wine drinkers flinch: sweet. Not syrupy, not cloying — just a wine that isn't bone dry. The style that quietly gets passed over for something more austere, more serious, more correct.

The top two wines at this festival were both off-dry. Georg Albrecht Schneider's Paterberg Riesling Kabinett at #1. Pine Ridge's Chenin Blanc + Viognier at #2.

The aversion to off-dry is a learned thing. And it's not completely off base — with lower quality wines, sweetness — residual sugar, sometimes from added concentrates — is used to mask real faults. Menus that treat "dry" as a proxy for quality. Wine culture that mistakes austere for serious. Strip that conditioning out of the room and the data gets pretty straightforward: people like balance, and they like fruit. A wine that meets you where you are tends to win.

And since when did seriousness become the goal? At NWLB, we look for quality wine with a good story — farming and winemaking that's respectful to the earth and to the people drinking it. But seriousness? Not part of the equation. We want playful. Two wines at the top of a 55-bottle blind tasting. Both off-dry. Make of that what you will.

2021 Georg Albrecht Schneider Paterberg Riesling Kabinett 2024 Pine Ridge Chenin Blanc-Viognier
EMMA GAO BREAKS THROUGH
Chinese wine holds its own against fourteen countries.
Silver Heights' The Last Warrior Red — an 80/20 Cabernet Sauvignon-Merlot blend from Ningxia — ranked #13 of 55.
Read more +

Chinese wine has been building a case for itself for years — more of it on shelves, more of it on lists, and a conversation that's starting to shift. Silver Heights' The Last Warrior Red — an 80/20 Cabernet Sauvignon-Merlot blend from Ningxia — ranked #13 of 55. In a blind tasting, NYC wine drinkers chose it over dozens of bottles from France, Spain, Italy, and the US. It's a classically-structured Bordeaux-style blend that feels immediately familiar, except it comes from a spot on the map most people couldn't point to on a good day.

Emma Gao, the winemaker behind Silver Heights, is one of the most compelling winemakers working anywhere in the world right now — and The Last Warrior is worth talking about not because it's Chinese wine, but because it's just really good wine. Plus, Silver Heights is also China's first Demeter-certified biodynamic winery.

The wine world is always shifting. Climate change, tariffs, trade pressures — they're reshaping what ends up on shelves and where it comes from. The next great wine region doesn't always announce itself. In this case, it just showed up at #13 out of 55, in a blind tasting, in the West Village.

2022 Silver Heights The Last Warrior Red
THE FARM REPORT
Nearly every wine at this festival was farmed with intention.
46 of 55 wines were grown sustainably, organically, or biodynamically. That's not a trend — that's a standard.
Read more +

46 of 55 wines at this festival were grown sustainably, organically, or biodynamically. The split: 21 organic, 20 sustainable, 5 biodynamic. Each certification carries its own weight, with different standards, different constraints, and different commitments to what goes into the ground and what stays out of it — and all of them speak to a standard of quality that shows up in the glass.

At NWLB, the wines we choose for our festivals reflect how we think about quality. Sustainable, organic, and biodynamic farming aren't checkboxes we screen for — they're values that show up consistently in the producers we're drawn to, because the care that goes into the vineyard tends to be the same care that goes into the bottle.

21 organic 20 sustainable 5 biodynamic
11% 46% 43% Biodynamic 5 wines Organic 21 wines Sustainable 20 wines
"We talk about the three Es of sustainability — environmental stewardship, economic feasibility, and the social equity piece that is becoming much more alive and well nowadays. This is the gold standard now for the industry. And I'm so happy to see leaders like Grgich Hills and others just really advancing best practices."
— Cynthia Lohr, J. Lohr Vineyards & Wines
The People
Meet the Woman Behind the Wine
Every woman who brought a bottle to this festival — organized by table. Click a name to read her story.
Argentina
Bulgaria
China
France
Georgia
Germany
Italy
New Zealand
Portugal
South Africa
Spain
USA
Emma Gao
Silver Heights
2022 Silver Heights The Last Warrior Red 2022 Silver Heights The Last Warrior White
"My feeling for winemaking stems in large part from my deep knowledge of the complex geological and social terroir of northern Ningxia.[It's] something I carry in my bones."
— Emma Gao
Emma Gao
Emma's father planted vines in Ningxia in 1999 — convinced the desert region could produce world-class wine — and sent her to Bordeaux to study oenology before the local government had even begun developing the area.

While interning at the legendary Château Calon-Ségur in Bordeaux, Emma fell in love with the winery's winemaker, Thierry Courtade — whose family had made wine there for three generations. He followed her back to Ningxia.

A 2017 spinal injury led Emma to traditional Chinese medicine — and transformed her entire philosophy. She connected biodynamic farming with the ancient 24 Jieqi solar terms and Tai Chi, and Silver Heights became China's first Demeter-certified biodynamic winery in 2023.
Jill Sanders
Working Dog Winery
2023 Working Dog Winery Traminette 2022 Working Dog Winery Cabernet Franc
"Winemaking married science and art in a way I didn't realize was possible."
— Jill Sanders
Jill Sanders
In 2012, Working Dog competed in the "Judgment of Princeton" — a blind tasting of NJ wines against top French wines modeled after the 1976 Judgment of Paris. Their Chardonnay ranked in the top 4 whites against premier Burgundies, at a fraction of the price.

Jill caught the wine bug in college while working at a winery — drawn in by what she describes as the perfect blend of agriculture, science, and art. She hasn't stopped since.

Jill has completed 20 harvests across the United States, Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa — alternating between the northern and southern hemispheres to chase harvest season year-round.
Shofang Hu
2024 Shofang Hu Muscat Hamburg Rosé
"I first tried Shofang's pet-nats at the Hong Kong Food and Wine Festival. They blew my mind." - FOUND NY
— FOUND NY
Shofang Hu
Shofang grew up with a family vineyard in Qinhuangdao, Hebei — planted in 1990 and always sold to large industrial wineries. When neighbors started digging up vines for higher-yielding crops, she took it over instead.

She studied winemaking at Northwest Agriculture and Forest University in Xi'an, then moved to Australia to earn her degree at the University of Adelaide — where she met her winemaking partner (& now husband) Li Liwei. The two returned to Qinhuangdao together in 2019 to build Shofang from the ground up.

Her crown jewel is old-vine Muscat Hamburg — a grape with a 200-year history in Hebei, with some vines dating to the 1940s.
Jules Donnini
Auburn Road Vineyards
2024 Auburn Road Vineyards Featherbed Vineyard Chardonnay 2024 Auburn Road Vineyards Dry Rosé
"I realize sometimes I am recognized because a woman winemaker is not the usual thing. But I don't want false accolades because I am a woman. I just want real accolades because I'm making freaking good wine."
— Jules Donnini
Jules Donnini
She and her husband Scott, also a lawyer, left their Philadelphia legal careers after 9/11 prompted a rethink of their lives. They founded Auburn Road in 2003, made their first wine in 2004, and never looked back.

Jules is a former litigator who taught herself winemaking — she enrolled in UC Davis's online winemaking certificate program and learned the rest on the job. No formal winemaking degree, ever.

Auburn Road models itself on an Italian agriturismo — the estate features a wood-fired pizza kitchen, an on-site enoteca (wine bar), espresso, and an après ski winter party. In Salem County, New Jersey.
Dilyana Vasileva
ENSO
2023 ENSO OTT1L
"Maybe ten years ago, it was almost impossible to say that Bulgaria and quality wine could be in one sentence. Now it's not the case, and I think we could face a good future."
— Dilyana Vasileva
Dilyana Vasileva
Winemaking runs in the family — her ancestors were among the investors in the Sungurlarski Misket Cooperative, her grandfather introduced her to the vineyards as a child, and her father is a recognized master brandy maker.

ENSO started as a craft rakia distillery before wine was ever part of the plan — built on the philosophy that great spirits require great raw material, so the vineyards were farmed organically from the start.

Nearly 50% of all wine professionals in Bulgaria are women — one of the highest rates in the world. Dilyana is a proud and vocal part of that community.
Nino Chitoshvili
Chito's Gvino
2023 Chito's Gvino Saperavi
"The emotional response from wine harmonizes with my inner world more than music ever did."
— Nino Chitoshvili
Nino Chitoshvili
Trained as a concert pianist, Nino switched careers after falling in love with wine while working as a wine tour guide starting in 2010.

She founded Chito's Gvino in 2017 by burying a few qvevri in her courtyard. By 2020, her entire production was pre-sold before release, mostly for export.

Nino does almost all of the vineyard and cellar work herself — aside from occasional help from locals — producing just a few thousand bottles a year, mostly for export.
Colleen FitzGerald
Pine Ridge Vineyards
2024 Pine Ridge Chenin Blanc-Viognier
"I have always been captivated by the perfect balance of chemistry and art in winemaking.Once you discover it, there is no going back."
— Colleen FitzGerald
Colleen FitzGerald
The Chenin Blanc + Viognier blend was born as an experiment in 1995 by Pine Ridge founder Gary Andrus — and is now one of America's most popular white wines.

Colleen started at Pine Ridge over a decade ago as a lab intern and worked her way up through enologist and assistant winemaker before becoming head winemaker for the CB+V program — a true rise through the ranks.

She earned a biochemistry degree from Cal Poly before discovering winemaking, drawn in by what she calls "the perfect balance of chemistry and art." Harvests in New Zealand, Paso Robles, and Napa followed.
Cynthia Lohr
J. Lohr Vineyards & Wines
2022 J. Lohr Tower Road Petite Sirah
"I sought to release myself from my self-imposed limitations associated with nepotism, and in doing so, found what I was made of."
— Cynthia Lohr
Cynthia Lohr
Cynthia's efforts to champion the family business helped earn J. Lohr Wine Enthusiast's 2010 "American Winery of the Year," and in 2021 she was named one of the San Jose Business Journal's "Top 100 Women of Influence."

Cynthia is responsible for the company's J. Lohr Touching Lives® program — a partnership with National Breast Cancer Foundation, Inc.® that has funded more than 8,000 mammograms for women in need.

Before joining the family winery, Cynthia spent nearly a decade in Silicon Valley Tech PR, including serving as a vice president at AlexanderOgilvy Public Relations Worldwide, leading Yahoo!'s pre-IPO strategic messaging, and serving as director of communications for Alexa Internet prior to its acquisition by Amazon.
Elena Casadei
Le Anfore di Elena Casadei
2021 Le Anfore di Elena Casadei Sangiovese Toscana IGT
"Among the barrels and the scent of must ... I discovered something unexpected....a deep, spontaneous connection with the very world I thought I wanted to escape.
— Elena Casadei
Elena Casadei
Elena grew up in a medieval castle — Castello del Trebbio, built in 1184 in the hills of Chianti. Not your average childhood.

The daughter of a winemaker and granddaughter of an agronomist, Elena spent her early years chasing her own story abroad before the vines called her home in 2013 — and she launched her own wine label just two years later.

Everything changed when nine terracotta amphorae arrived from Georgia. Elena was captivated by the ancient vessel and now ages all her wines exclusively in amphora, with no additives and minimal mechanical intervention.
Eva Plazas
Vilarnau
NV Vilarnau Rosé Delicat Cava Brut Reserva
"Our respect for the environment, the importance of having the best grape in each variety, and the constant research for innovation is what makes our daily life more exciting."
— Eva Plazas
Eva Plazas
Eva is the President of Cava Women, an organization of women producers, CEOs, and industry leaders within the D.O. Cava — using the platform to shed light on the largely untold story of how women kept Penedès vineyards alive during Spain's Civil War.

Eva was literally born into cava — raised in Sant Sadurní d'Anoia, the capital of the cava world, where her grandfather was a viticulturist and her father worked in wine logistics.

Local tradition even has it that babies' pacifiers are dipped in cava at baptisms — so her very first taste of sparkling wine was at her own christening.
Gina Hennen
McCollum Heritage 91
2022 McCollum Heritage 91 Pinot Noir
"Wine grapes can express the location they're grown in provided the place has something to say."
— Gina Hennen
Gina Hennen
Gina is the winemaker behind McCollum Heritage 91 — the estate founded by NBA player CJ McCollum and his wife Elise on a 318-acre property in Yamhill-Carlton AVA, with 56 acres now under vine.

She earned her Bachelor's from the University of Louisiana and a Certificate in Viticulture and Enology from UC Davis, then spent years working harvests across Oregon before landing at Heritage 91.

The vineyard sits on ancient Jory and Nekia soils — the iron-rich volcanic basalt unique to the Dundee Hills and credited for producing some of Oregon's most distinctive Pinot Noir.
Kim Abrahams
Archery Summit
2023 Archery Summit Dundee Hills Pinot Noir
"I've always believed that great wine is more than what's in the bottle – It's about the journey, the land, and the people. Joining Archery Summit is an incredible opportunity to shape the future while honoring the story that has brought us here."
— Kim Abrahams
Kim Abrahams
Archery Summit's six estate vineyards are all rooted in the Dundee Hills' ancient Jory soils — iron-rich, basalt-based volcanic soils unique to Oregon and credited for producing some of the world's most distinctive Pinot Noir.

Kim is a true citizen of the wine world — before arriving in the Willamette Valley, she worked harvests at Lingua Franca in Eola-Amity Hills, Domaine Serene in the Dundee Hills, Robert Sinskey Vineyards in Napa Valley, and Delamere in Tasmania, Australia.

She keeps bees. When not in the cellar, Kim tends her own hives — alongside a passion for literature and the intersection of food and wine.
Violet Grgich
Grgich Hills Estate
2023 Grgich Hills Estate Napa Valley Chardonnay
"My dad always told me I'd be a winemaker, but I was a stubborn Croatian. It wasn't until he stopped insisting on it that I decided I'd rather have music as a passion and wine as a career."
— Violet Grgich
Violet Grgich
When she's not running Grgich Hills Estate, Violet performs baroque harpsichord — and even co-founded the band Les Violettes with her husband.

Daughter of Croatian immigrants, Violet leads the winery with a mission far beyond wine — championing food security, free medical education, and peace-building worldwide.

Her father Mike crafted the 1973 Château Montelena Chardonnay that won the legendary 1976 Judgment of Paris blind tasting — the moment that put California wine on the map and changed the industry forever.
Brianne Engles
Chamisal Vineyards
2024 Chamisal SLO County Chardonnay
"Our highest producing, highest quality blocks tend to have lower yields. When you have lower yields, your cost of farming is higher.We smell it, sip it, give it grades.
— Brianne Engles
Brianne Engles
She also oversees Malene Wines, a Provence-style rosé program sold to retailers and restaurants nationwide, with tastings out of a vintage Airstream trailer on the estate.

Brianne is Chamisal's first female head winemaker in the winery's 50-year history — appointed in 2023, the same year the estate was nominated for Wine Enthusiast's "American Winery of the Year."

Chamisal became the first winery in the country to install a Miyawaki forest — planting 45 species of native oak and shrubs on the estate to sequester carbon.
Kate Derby
Spring Valley Vineyard
2022 Spring Valley Vineyard Uriah Red
"You start with amazing ingredients and let them shine with limited but thoughtful manipulation.Every vintage is different and that's the beauty of winemaking.You get to play with what you are given."
— Kate Derby
Kate Derby
Kate is a sixth-generation farmer — her family has worked this land in the Walla Walla Valley for over 150 years, long before a single vine was planted.

She grew up in Minnesota, but spent every summer at Spring Valley — hoeing rows with her grandfather and racking wine with her uncle Devin. She never wanted to leave — and a week after graduating college, she made it permanent.

Every wine at Spring Valley is named after a real family member. Kate is named after Katherine Corkrum — the great-great-grandmother she now honors with a wine of her own.
Luisa Amorim
Quinta Nova / Taboadella 1255
2023 Taboadella 1255 Encruzado Reserve
"If you believe in the future, in people, in what you do, then you are attached to the land and to the things that really matter.Wine is a long-term business – it's for my children, and my grandchildren."
— Luisa Amorim
Luisa Amorim
Quinta Nova's cellar dates to 1764 — built just eight years after the Douro became the world's first officially demarcated wine region.

At just 26, Luisa created the Douro's first unoaked red and two blanc de noir rosés — radical moves at a time when the valley was almost entirely focused on traditional reds.

Luísa's family has been the world's largest cork producer since 1870. When she needed a solution for retaining water and protecting vine roots from heat, she spread granulated cork across the soil — the family business, reimagined.
Ruso Chochishvili
Kapistoni Winery
2021 Kapistoni Budeshuri Saperavi 2024 Kapistoni Chinebuli 2022 Kapistoni Goruli Mtsvane
"Qvevri holds a special place in Georgian winemaking tradition. It is shaped like a mother's womb as a symbolic reference that wine is made from Mother Earth and buried in Mother Earth."
— Ruso Chochishvili
Ruso Chochishvili
"Kapistoni" isn't a place — it was the family's word for an exceptional wine. When grandfather tasted something truly special, he'd exclaim "Kapistoni!"

Her brother Niko, now the estate's winemaker, returned to Georgia after retiring from the US Army and revived a seven-generation family winemaking tradition in the basement of his country house.

Every Kapistoni wine is fermented and aged exclusively in qvevri — ancient clay vessels buried underground, part of an 8,000-year-old tradition.
Anne Sery
Zephyr Wells
2024 Zephyr Wells Chenin Blanc 'Le Pineau'
"It wasn't until I fully understood the concept of expressing terroir that I was excited about pursuing a career in winemaking. Pinot Noir has the uncanny ability to allow the land that it is grown in to show through in the wine."
— Anne Sery
Anne Sery
Before falling in love with Oregon during an internship at Beaux Frères, Anne trained in some of Burgundy's most celebrated cellars — including Coche-Dury, Hubert Lignier, and Maison Bouchard.

Anne was born on Réunion Island — a French island in the Indian Ocean, 450 miles east of Madagascar — and grew up with a diplomat father who kept Burgundy legends like Roumier and Louis Boillot on the dinner table nightly.

Zephyr Wells is Anne's personal side project, made possible because NW Wine Company owns Eola Springs Vineyard — planted with varieties rarely seen in Oregon.
Sandra Bravo
Sierra de Tolono
2023 Sierra de Tolono Rioja Tinto
"Priorat really influenced me to make artisanal wines, and to understand that the most important is the vineyard — the vineyard with soul."
— Sandra Bravo
Sandra Bravo
After seven formative years in Priorat, Sandra resolved to return home — "to make different wines where I come from" — starting from scratch in 2012 with nothing but a rented vineyard.

Sandra is half Riojan, half Basque — which is why her top wines carry Basque names, and why she describes her vineyards in Villabuena as deeply personal: "I wanted to give my Villabuena wines a Basque name."

When Sandra got pregnant, colleagues said she couldn't do both. Her response? Her best vintage ever in 2018, record sales, and Tim Atkin's Young Winemaker of the Year.
Diana Snowden Seysses
Snowden Vineyards
2022 Snowden Vineyards Merlot 'Lost Vineyard'
"This is where I became obsessed with terroir. For me, this means practising organics and biodynamics. The soils need to thrive."
— Diana Snowden Seysses
Diana Snowden Seysses
She had no plans to return to California until a brettanomyces infection wiped out three consecutive Snowden vintages — her father called for help, and she answered.

Diana grew up climbing oak trees and eating Cabernet clusters on her family's 160-acre Napa ranch — then left for Burgundy and married into Domaine Dujac, one of the most celebrated names in Pinot Noir.

At UC Davis, she was nicknamed "Señorita Macho" for her enthusiasm for the most physically demanding work in the cellar.
Anne & Marie Guégniard
Domaine de la Bergerie
2023 Domaine de la Bergerie 'La Cerisaie' Anjou Rouge
"The nature that surrounds us inspires us every day. We hope that this inspiration comes through in our wines."
— Anne & Marie Guégniard
Anne & Marie Guégniard
Before returning to her family vineyards, Anne trained as a sommelier and spent years working across the US, London, and Switzerland — experiences she credits with shaping how she thinks about wine at the table.

Anne & Marie are the 4th generation to work the Bergerie land — but the 8th generation of winemakers in their family, a lineage that began when her great-grandmother bought the estate by candlelight in 1961.

Marie, Anne's younger sister, pivoted from a career in psychology to winemaking, retrained in Montpellier, and joined Anne in 2018.
Anne Gros
Domaine Gros-Tollot
2022 Domaine Gros-Tollot 'La Cinso' Cotes du Brian
"I decided to give it a try, just like revenge. In a way my father was pretty sure that the estate would be sold, because I was a girl. But... voila!"
— Anne Gros
Anne Gros
After decades making some of Burgundy's most sought-after Pinot Noir, Anne and her partner Jean-Paul Tollot discovered a small corner of the Minervois in 2006 — drawn partly by its altitude of 220 metres, identical to Vosne-Romanée.

Taking over her father's estate at just 25, Anne rebuilt Domaine Anne Gros from the ground up — expanding it from 3 to 6.5 hectares and turning it into one of Burgundy's most celebrated names.

She initially pursued arts before transitioning to viticulture and oenology, studying in Beaune and Dijon.
Dr. Laura Catena
Catena Zapata
2024 Catena 'White Clay' Luján de Cuyo White Blend
"My way of winemaking is always to respect the grape, respect its origin and identity, and in each harvest, show its best version."
— Laura Principiano
Dr. Laura Catena
Dr. Laura Catena holds degrees from Harvard and Stanford, and spent 27 years as an emergency room physician in San Francisco before stepping into her role as a global ambassador for Argentine wine — and eventually taking the reins at Catena Zapata.

Her father Nicolás is widely credited with pioneering high-altitude viticulture in Mendoza. Laura has continued that legacy, founding the Catena Institute of Wine — a research operation that has produced over 100 peer-reviewed papers on Malbec, terroir, and high-altitude farming.

Catena Zapata has received multiple 100-point scores from Robert Parker and is consistently ranked among the world's top wineries. Laura's parallel career in medicine and wine is perhaps unmatched in the industry.
Angela Fronti
Istine
2023 Istine Chianti Classico
"There are moments when I am physically very tired, I cannot do anything without committing myself completely. But it's a beautiful job that I'm passionate about and it's the only one I would want to do in my life."
— Angela Fronti
Angela Fronti
Less than a decade after her first vintage, Angela won the Premio Gambelli — one of the most prestigious awards in Tuscan wine, named after the legendary Chianti consultant Giulio Gambelli.

For generations the Fronti family built and managed vineyards for other famous Tuscan wineries — it wasn't until Angela graduated from enology school and convinced her father and uncle they needed their own label that Istine was born in 2009.

Angela personally oversees everything from the vineyards to winemaking to sales from day one.
Élodie Roy
Domaine Elodie Roy
2021 Domaine Elodie Roy Bourgogne Aligoté Vielles Vignes
"The work in the vineyard is for me the basis of everything — it is essential and primordial for the quality of the grapes and therefore the wine."
— Élodie Roy
Élodie Roy
Six months into a banking career, Elodie quit — returned to school to study wine, and never looked back.

She spent 11 years at the legendary Domaine Anne Gros in Vosne-Romanée — before taking over her family's vineyards in Maranges, originally planted by her grandfather and father.

Elodie is a driving force behind two female winemaker collectives in Burgundy — Femmes et Vins de Bourgogne and Mi-Filles / Mi-Raisins — championing the region's lesser-known appellations.
Marelise Niemann
Momento by Marelise Niemann
2023 Momento Grenache Blanc Western Cape
"The way Grenache expresses where it comes from — the soil, the region, the climate, the people who make it — very few other varietals are as clear cut as Grenache. It's a very delicate grape. If you work with it too hard it loses its energy."
— Marelise Niemann
Marelise Niemann
After completing a harvest in Spain's Priorat region alongside legendary winemaker Eben Sadie, Marelise returned to South Africa in 2010 determined to seek out old vine Grenache.

Now dubbed the "Grenache-whisperer," Marelise launched Momento in 2013 with just two barrels and 780 bottles while still working full-time at Beaumont Family Wines.

The Grenache Gris she works with comes from the only vineyard of this variety in all of South Africa — a fitting find for a winemaker who has made it her mission to champion a grape the rest of the country had largely ignored.
Susana Esteban
2022 Susana Esteban Alentejano 'Tira O Veu'
"I discovered very young what I am passionate about. I determined then to devote myself to achieving what I set out to do. It is a work in progress."
— Susana Esteban
Susana Esteban
She spent two full years searching every corner of Alentejo for the right vineyards — it's no coincidence her flagship wine is called "Procura," the Portuguese word for "search."

Susana signed up for a wine tasting at 18 on a whim — no family connection to wine, no idea what being a winemaker actually meant — and left having found her life's calling.

In 2011, she became the first woman ever awarded "Winemaker of the Year" by Revista de Vinhos, Portugal's premier wine publication — a title that in Portuguese is grammatically male.
Mai Vu & Pam Chang
Mai Vino
Mai Vino Sauvignon Blanc Mai Vino Rosé Mai Vino Pinot Noir Mai Vino Amber
"We hate waste but love wine and believe that having a great glass of wine shouldn't be difficult OR expensive."
— Mai Vu & Pam Chang
Mai Vu & Pam Chang
Mai met her co-founder, Pam Chang, in New York more than 20 years ago. Years later, their friendship turned into a business partnership and a reminder that sometimes the best wine companies start with women supporting women.

Mai spent roughly a decade as a strategist at top ad agencies — working on campaigns for Chanel, Verizon, and Timberland — before ditching Madison Avenue to start a wine company because she was tired of wasting unfinished bottles.

Mai Vino didn't just put wine in a bag — they liberated the bag from the box. By stripping away the cardboard, they cut packaging waste even further, keeping wine fresh for 30 days after opening and reducing its carbon footprint by 80% vs. glass.
Alicia Rechner
Backsberg Family Wines
2020 Backsberg Pumphouse Shiraz 2023 Backsberg Gravel Road Chenin Blanc
"Each vintage tells a story of place and purpose."
— Alicia Rechner
Alicia Rechner
Outside the cellar, Alicia makes her own natural skincare products — which might not be as surprising as it sounds for someone who describes winemaking as equal parts chemistry and equal parts instinct.

Before joining Backsberg, Alicia spent four years honing her craft abroad — working harvests in the Mosel in Germany and McLaren Vale in Australia.

Backsberg was the first certified carbon neutral winery in South Africa — and when they achieved the status in 2006, they were one of only three wineries in the world to hold it. Alicia has been a part of upholding that legacy ever since.
Erin Reddan
ECR Vintners
2025 ECR Vintners Trousseau Gris 2023 ECR Vintners Blanc de Blancs Sparkling
"I also experienced firsthand that women use wine as a catalyst for connection. Think of the amazing conversations you've had with other females about life, career, love and family over glasses of wine. It is the greatest connector."
— Erin Reddan
Erin Reddan
After working in a tasting room, Erin noticed wine was being scored, judged, and marketed almost entirely to men — despite women being the dominant buyers. She founded ECR Vintners to change that.

Erin started ECR Vintners with exactly two barrels — one Chardonnay, one Sauvignon Blanc. No vineyard, no investors, no family money. Entirely self-funded from day one.

In an industry where women have historically been left off the label, Erin put her own name front and center. ECR = Erin Carroll Reddan.
Maite Fernandez
Abel Mendoza
2021 Abel Mendoza 5V
"The biggest thing in this business is the relationships between people."
— Maite Fernandez
Maite Fernandez
Maite and her husband Abel have been crafting single varietal white wines since before it was even legal to do so in Rioja. In fact, these wines weren't even permitted in Rioja until 2017.

Maite didn't initially set out to make wine. She originally left her village to study public relations in England — but returned home, met Abel, and together they crafted their vision for the vineyards.

They ignore Rioja's official aging classification entirely — no Crianza, Reserva, or Gran Reserva on their labels. Instead they take a Burgundian approach, fermenting each plot separately and adapting to the vintage.
Rosa Zarza
Bodegas Pandora
2021 Bodegas Pandora Verdejo
"Our goal is to produce unique, subtle and emotional wines, respecting the variety above all else.
— Rosa Zarza
Rosa Zarza
Harvest at Bodegas Pandora happens at night — Rosa insists on it, to bring in fruit at its coolest and most pristine.

Rosa is what the wine world calls a "flying winemaker" — she works across multiple Spanish appellations simultaneously, including Rueda, Ribera del Duero, Toro, and Costers del Segre.

Bodegas Pandora was founded in 2019 by three friends who had all built careers entirely outside the wine industry. Their shared love of Rueda wine eventually got the better of them, so they recruited Rosa to make their dream a reality. The inaugural vintage was 2020.
Nadine, Charlotte, & Valentine Picant
Nadine, Charlotte, & Valentine Picant
2018 Château Hostens-Picant Cuvée des Demoiselles
When Yves and Nadine mentioned selling the estate, both daughters independently decided to come home instead — Charlotte from the United States, Valentine straight out of law school.

In 1986, Yves fell in love with a rundown 100-acre estate and bought it on impulse — without telling Nadine. Three weeks later he showed her & she fell just as hard. They left their careers behind, and produced their first vintage four years later.

Every family member has a wine named after them: Cuvée Charlotte, Cuvée Valentine, and Cuvée Nana. Cuvée des Demoiselles is named to celebrate all the women responsible for building the business.
Ursula Müller
Georg Albrecht Schneider
2021 Georg Albrecht Schneider Paterberg Riesling Kabinett 2021 Georg Albrecht Schneider Vom Kalk Riesling
"I love that this grape variety [Riesling] has a different expression everywhere — that origin is simply what shapes everything."
— Ursula Müller
Ursula Müller
She never planned to be a winemaker — she studied business administration and went to work at a pharmaceutical company. When her siblings had no interest, she came back in 2011 and merged the family estate with her husband Steffen's in 2015.

Ursula is the 9th generation of the Schneider family, founded in 1806 when her ancestor bought vineyards Napoleon was selling off to fund his war campaigns.

Her favorite vineyard is the Hipping — she was there as a little girl when it was planted, and every harvest, the crew ends the season there with a meal in the field and a song together.
Anna Remond
OTU Wines
2024 OTU Estate Sauvignon Blanc 2025 OTU Estate Limited Release Sauvignon Blanc
"Our wine style is all about letting the wine speak truly of the land where it is grown, with minimal intervention."
— Anna Remond
Anna Remond
She trained in two of France's most iconic regions — Sancerre and Burgundy — bringing that Old World precision back to New Zealand's wildest coastal terroir.

Anna grew up with a rural background in Canterbury, New Zealand — and became one of the country's most respected white winemakers, spending 15 years heading up the white wine program at one of New Zealand's largest wineries.

Anna is a mentor for the Women in Wine Programme in New Zealand, actively supporting the next generation of women winemakers in Marlborough and beyond.
Nadine Gublin
Maison Prosper Maufoux
2023 Maison Prosper Maufoux Macon Villages NV Maison Prosper Maufoux Cremant de Bourgogne
"The most important thing for high-quality wine is the work in the vineyard — the fruit quality. My job in the winery is only 10% of it — a small part."
— Nadine Gublin
Nadine Gublin
She became the first woman ever named "Winemaker of the Year" by La Revue du Vin de France — France's most prestigious wine publication. The Los Angeles Times wrote that she was "the person who truly broke the glass ceiling of Burgundy."

Nadine grew up in a cereal farming family in Champagne — no wine background at all. She moved to Dijon in 1977 to study oenology, where her mentors were Professor Feuillat of the University of Burgundy and the legendary Henri Jayer.

Prosper Maufoux was founded in 1860 by a notary who left his law practice to follow his passion for wine. Today Nadine oversees wines across Meursault, Puligny-Montrachet, Chassagne-Montrachet, and beyond.
Julia Zuccardi
Bodega Santa Julia
2025 Santa Julia 'La Mantis' Pet Nat Sparkling 2025 Santa Julia Chimango Rosé
"Our family has always valued caring for the land we live on. And I understand this vision to include people."
— Julia Zuccardi
Julia Zuccardi
The winery was named after Julia when she was just 12 years old — and she's admitted she initially felt awkward about it, never imagining she'd actually end up working there.

As Head of Tourism, Hospitality, and Social Responsibility across both Santa Julia and Zuccardi Valle de Uco, Julia oversees a winery that is Argentina's largest owner of certified organic vineyards.

Her grandmother Emma ran the estate's social responsibility program until age 94, coming to the office daily. Julia took over before she passed and now oversees the estate's Fair for Life certification, daycare program, and community initiatives.
Laura Principiano
Familia Zuccardi
2023 Zuccardi Poligonos Chardonnay 2023 Zuccardi Poligonos Sémillon
"My way of winemaking is always to respect the grape, respect its origin and identity, and in each harvest, show its best version."
— Laura Principiano
Laura Principiano
Laura didn't grow up in wine — she studied agronomy to work on her father's fruit orchards. She was recruited for an opening at Zuccardi in 2009, she got the job, and never looked back.

She leads not just the winemaking team but also Zuccardi's Research and Development department. It's as much a science lab as it is a cellar.

Zuccardi was named World's Best Vineyard three consecutive years (2019, 2020, 2021), then entered the Hall of Fame in 2022 — the same year they became the first winery in Argentina to receive three simultaneous 100-point scores from Robert Parker.
Katie Lee Biegel
Kind of Wild Wines
NV Kind of Wild Wines Cava 2024 Kind of Wild Wines Gruner Veltliner
"This is the wine I want to drink, that I serve at home when entertaining, and I believe everyone who tries it will feel the same."
— Katie Lee Biegel
Katie Lee Biegel
Katie had spent 20 years eating clean — then realized her wine didn't meet the same standard. After having her daughter and noticing wine leaving her feeling foggy, she went searching for something better, found Kind of Wild, and became co-founder in 2023.

Katie grew up in Milton, West Virginia, learning to cook at age 4 in her grandmother's kitchen — a woman she calls "the most incredible cook on the planet."

She hosted the very first season of Top Chef in 2006, and spent over a decade as Emmy-nominated co-host of Food Network's The Kitchen.
The Results
Full Festival Rankings
Top 25 wines ranked by composite score — blind, no labels. Wines on the NWLB × Le Du Shelf are marked SHELF
Memorability
Rated 1–5 immediately after tasting. We asked a simple question right after the sip: what kind of impression did this leave? Not just whether the wine was "good," but whether it stayed with you. The wines that score high here are the ones that linger — the ones people bring up later, remember in a shop, and come back to without needing a label to remind them why.
Purchase Intent
Guests rated their likelihood of purchasing on a spectrum from "I would never buy this" to "I would actively seek this out." This is where preference turns into behavior. It captures not just enjoyment, but momentum — whether a wine inspires someone to go find it again, on their own time, with their own money.
Dinner Party
Guests rated whether they would feel confident serving the wine to others. This is a measure of social trust. Not just "did I like this," but "would I stand behind it?" Wines that perform well here feel reliable, versatile, and worth sharing — the bottles people reach for when the stakes are a little higher than a solo glass.
Price Perception
Guests selected a price range before seeing the actual retail price. Before labels, reputation, or region could shape expectations, guests made a call on value. This reveals how a wine presents itself on its own — and where perception and reality diverge in ways that are often surprising.
# Wine Winery Country Price
1 2021 Georg Albrecht Schneider Paterberg Riesling Kabinett SHELF Georg Albrecht Schneider Rheinhessen, Germany $18
2 2024 Pine Ridge Chenin Blanc-Viognier SHELF Pine Ridge Vineyards Clarksburg & Lodi, California, USA $16
3 2024 OTU Estate Sauvignon Blanc SHELF OTU Wines Awatere Valley, Marlborough, New Zealand $19
4 2022 J. Lohr Tower Road Petite Sirah J. Lohr Vineyards & Wines Paso Robles AVA, USA $35
5 2021 Le Anfore di Elena Casadei Sangiovese Toscana IGT Le Anfore di Elena Casadei Toscana IGT, Italy $26
6 NV Vilarnau Rosé Delicat Cava Brut Reserva Vilarnau DO Cava / DO Penedes, Catalonia, Spain $18
7 2021 Georg Albrecht Schneider Vom Kalk Riesling Georg Albrecht Schneider Rheinhessen, Germany $19
8 2023 Maison Prosper Maufoux Macon Villages Maison Prosper Maufoux AOC Mâcon Villages, Bourgogne, France $24
9 2025 Santa Julia 'La Mantis' Pet Nat Sparkling SHELF Bodega Santa Julia Maipú, Mendoza, Argentina $23
10 2022 McCollum Heritage 91 Pinot Noir McCollum Heritage 91 Chehalem Mountains AVA, Willamette Valley, Oregon, USA $55
11 2021 Kapistoni Budeshuri Saperavi Kapistoni Winery Central Gori, Central Kartli, Georgia $33
12 2024 Zephyr Wells Chenin Blanc 'Le Pineau' Zephyr Wells Willamette Valley, Oregon, USA $25
13 2022 Silver Heights The Last Warrior Red SHELF Silver Heights Ningxia, China $30
14 2023 Working Dog Winery Traminette Working Dog Winery Mercer County, New Jersey, USA $19
15 2020 Backsberg Pumphouse Shiraz SHELF Backsberg Family Wines Western Cape, South Africa $24
16 2025 ECR Vintners Trousseau Gris ECR Vintners Russian River Valley AVA, Sonoma County, California, USA $40
17 2023 Sierra de Tolono Rioja Tinto Sierra de Tolono Rioja Alavesa DOCa, Spain $21
18 2023 Archery Summit Dundee Hills Pinot Noir Archery Summit Dundee Hills AVA, Willamette Valley, Oregon, USA $65
19 2025 OTU Estate Limited Release Sauvignon Blanc OTU Wines Awatere Valley, Marlborough, New Zealand $29
20 2024 Kapistoni Chinebuli Kapistoni Winery Central Kartli, Georgia $28
21 2023 Grgich Hills Estate Napa Valley Chardonnay Grgich Hills Estate Napa Valley, California, USA $42
22 NV Maison Prosper Maufoux Cremant de Bourgogne Maison Prosper Maufoux AOC Crémant de Bourgogne, France $24
23 2023 Zuccardi Poligonos Chardonnay Zuccardi Valle de Uco, Mendoza, Argentina $30
24 2022 Snowden Vineyards Merlot 'Lost Vineyard' Snowden Vineyards Lost Vineyard, Napa Valley, California, USA $45
25 NV Kind of Wild Wines Cava Kind of Wild Wines D.O. Cava, Penedes, Spain $26
Drinky
Full Festival Rankings — Top 25 Wines
# Wine Winery Country Price
1 2021 Georg Albrecht Schneider Paterberg Riesling Kabinett SHELF Georg Albrecht Schneider Rheinhessen, Germany $18
2 2024 Pine Ridge Chenin Blanc-Viognier SHELF Pine Ridge Vineyards Clarksburg & Lodi, California, USA $16
3 2024 OTU Estate Sauvignon Blanc SHELF OTU Wines Awatere Valley, Marlborough, New Zealand $19
4 2022 J. Lohr Tower Road Petite Sirah J. Lohr Vineyards & Wines Paso Robles AVA, USA $35
5 2021 Le Anfore di Elena Casadei Sangiovese Toscana IGT Le Anfore di Elena Casadei Toscana IGT, Italy $26
6 NV Vilarnau Rosé Delicat Cava Brut Reserva Vilarnau DO Cava / DO Penedes, Catalonia, Spain $18
7 2021 Georg Albrecht Schneider Vom Kalk Riesling Georg Albrecht Schneider Rheinhessen, Germany $19
8 2023 Maison Prosper Maufoux Macon Villages Maison Prosper Maufoux AOC Mâcon Villages, Bourgogne, France $24
9 2025 Santa Julia 'La Mantis' Pet Nat Sparkling SHELF Bodega Santa Julia Maipú, Mendoza, Argentina $23
10 2022 McCollum Heritage 91 Pinot Noir McCollum Heritage 91 Chehalem Mountains AVA, Willamette Valley, Oregon, USA $55
11 2021 Kapistoni Budeshuri Saperavi Kapistoni Winery Central Gori, Central Kartli, Georgia $33
12 2024 Zephyr Wells Chenin Blanc 'Le Pineau' Zephyr Wells Willamette Valley, Oregon, USA $25
13 2022 Silver Heights The Last Warrior Red SHELF Silver Heights Ningxia, China $30
14 2023 Working Dog Winery Traminette Working Dog Winery Mercer County, New Jersey, USA $19
15 2020 Backsberg Pumphouse Shiraz SHELF Backsberg Family Wines Western Cape, South Africa $24
16 2025 ECR Vintners Trousseau Gris ECR Vintners Russian River Valley AVA, Sonoma County, California, USA $40
17 2023 Sierra de Tolono Rioja Tinto Sierra de Tolono Rioja Alavesa DOCa, Spain $21
18 2023 Archery Summit Dundee Hills Pinot Noir Archery Summit Dundee Hills AVA, Willamette Valley, Oregon, USA $65
19 2025 OTU Estate Limited Release Sauvignon Blanc OTU Wines Awatere Valley, Marlborough, New Zealand $29
20 2024 Kapistoni Chinebuli Kapistoni Winery Central Kartli, Georgia $28
21 2023 Grgich Hills Estate Napa Valley Chardonnay Grgich Hills Estate Napa Valley, California, USA $42
22 NV Maison Prosper Maufoux Cremant de Bourgogne Maison Prosper Maufoux AOC Crémant de Bourgogne, France $24
23 2023 Zuccardi Poligonos Chardonnay Zuccardi Valle de Uco, Mendoza, Argentina $30
24 2022 Snowden Vineyards Merlot 'Lost Vineyard' Snowden Vineyards Lost Vineyard, Napa Valley, California, USA $45
25 NV Kind of Wild Wines Cava Kind of Wild Wines D.O. Cava, Penedes, Spain $26
What's Next
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The next Women in Wine Festival is happening June 14, 2026 at Le Du Wines in the West Village. Same blind format. A tighter selection. More women pouring what they built.

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No Wine Left Behind is a data-driven tasting platform — and a damn good time. We host blind tasting events built around storytelling, discovery, and genuine reaction, which means the consumer insights we deliver to the wine trade are the real deal: unfiltered opinions from real drinkers, captured in the moment through our digital blind-tasting game. Our events are rooted one of the country's most influential wine markets, and the evidence-based narratives we produce support brand growth, trade pitches, and strategic marketing in ways that polished focus groups simply can't.

We give the industry what it's been missing — honest, human data on how modern drinkers actually perceive and choose wine. No jargon. No pressure. No wine left behind.

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No Wine Left Behind · Women in Wine Festival · March 2026 · New York City · knowwineleftbehind.com · info@knowwineleftbehind.com