How Fiat Thinking Warped the Wine Industry In Europe, wine culture was built slowly over generations. Time, not money, was the main ingredient. You could not fake it. You could not rush it. image In the U.S., it was different. By the time American wine started gaining recognition, the corporate mindset was already seeping in. Short-term profit was not a side effect. It was the strategy. The top tier of American wine still exists. But everywhere below it, corners were cut. Volume has mattered more than vineyard. Brand has mattered more than bottle. Massive corporations scaled up, standardized the product, and flooded the shelves, crowding out everyone else. Not because they were evil. Because the system rewarded short-term thinking over long-term value. Now, the cracks are showing. People are starting to ask why wine makes them feel so bad. Some are giving up on it entirely. Others are looking deeper and finding that lower-intervention, local wines are what they had been missing all along. Wine, at its core, is a low time preference vehicle. It seems to not want to be rushed, manipulated, or manufactured. It seems to er towards expressing the land, the season, and the patience of the people behind it. The roots of wine are still strong. In Europe, they were never fully severed. And in the U.S., we are finally starting to let them grow. But we are a long way from home.

Replies (33)

no food/drink products that are rushed are the same as the real deal. another one that comes to mind is all the fake balsamic vinegar in North America. we can also expand this to art, writing, wisdom and many other thibgs that we humans do.
absolutely. something about wine being in the cross section of culture, food, status and time preference really makes it hit when talking about this kind of thing
Interesting timing, I had several glasses of your wine last night and didn't get the extremely dehydrated/groggy feeling I often do with wines. And I don't think I'm ever actually dehydrated. The only change was the wine. Could be coincidence, but I'm doubtful. It's more likely my local shelves are just packed with shit wine lol
Your local shelves are definitely packed with shit wine, but that doesnt mean theres some good wine in there. Just gotta find it. Happy to be of service until you find your local supplier
This is why wine is now a special occasion drink for me, as the only wine I will drink is pretty expensive to be blunt. Something to share with special people or celebrate a special moment.
I’m really enjoying these longer form, wine industry posts btw Ben!
Personally I buy a few cases of French Bordeaux every year En Prem and just live off that, take a case out now and again from ten, twenty years ago and every bottle is special. It’s a nice way to do it
Tbh I’m just interested in it all! The behind the scenes how this all works. Why some wines are made for aging and others aren’t, how often you change the process and why, how you know when to pick, or what barrels to use or how to price a vintage, it’s all fascinating to me
got those all added to my ideas list. I kind of joined the wine industry as an outsider and thanks to bitcoin have been able to go my own route after seeing it and wanting no part of it. I have a decent view, but having never been deep in it myself, there's always more for me to learn which makes writing these things fun. Will keep posting. I really appreciate that you're enjoying them.
dude thats absolutely the way to go. Find what you like and buy cases, stock up and in a decade you'll never have to drink young wine again. Not a bad way to slip through old age. Can't afford old wine? make it only yourself. Personally, having grown up on a Pinot Vineyard, I'm more of a Burgandy guy, but maybe you'll have to convince me why I'm wrong one glass at a time
Same thing applies to pretty much all alcohol. Even more so for spirits. Moonshine has never given me a hangover. All the large batch low quality spirits are guaranteed to give everyone hangovers because they aren't as clean. There's more impurities. Even single distilled moonshine tends to be cleaner than triple distilled whatever commercial vodka or whiskey
I’m cracking one tonight to go with a steak and mushroom pie I’m making for the fam. It’s probably a bit decadent but there will be some of this in the pie too 🤣 image
That looks like a chicken pot pie, but on steroids. How have I never heard of such a creation?!
Yes, very. I suspect pies are everywhere with every kind of filling but you can’t beat a nice meaty beef one! And it goes well with red wine!
Hit me with a recipe when you have a chance. You’ve got me very curious!