![]() No problem, check out Usual Wines’ first limited edition offering, titled Usual Reserve. Or, maybe you’re more into limited-edition options. More into one flavor? Solo flavor packs start at just $40. Love a variety? The Usual Mixed Pack allows you to try each flavor in a pack of 12 for just $80. There are a ton of options to choose from depending on how much wine you want and flavor choices. Additionally, these make a great gift to give during the holiday season. Each beaker also serves the perfect glass for one, making it a worthwhile wine to bulk up on as you continue to solo sip from your couch or plan socially-distanced outdoor hang sessions. Not only are the wines mouthwateringly delicious, but the bottles help make drinking tons of fun. If you’re a wine lover (or know a wine lover), you have to give Usual Wines a try for yourself. So, yes, the brut was delicious and packed tons of flavor (including a lemony twang I wasn’t expecting), but the rosé took home the trophy for me. Maybe I was still so floored from what my taste buds had just experienced a few minutes prior to really invest myself into the brut, but I am also more of a rosé guy to begin with. It was delicious, don’t get me wrong, but the brut was in no way comparable to the rosé. Head to the Usual Wines website and you’ll find hundreds of reviews singing the praises of this new wine brand.Īfter finishing my pink drink, I popped a bottle of the brut and hoped for the best. It was pleasantly surprising, to say the least. I mean, I figured it would be good, but truthfully speaking, I would go so far as to say it was one of my favorite glasses of wine I’ve had in 2020. It had a somewhat perfect taste that I wasn’t quite expecting. Yeah, it was totally crisp and refreshing, but it was also bold and boisterous. The taste wasn’t like any rosé I’ve had in the past. Unsure whether or not it was the show or the flavor, I had another sip and realized it was, in fact, the flavor. ![]() It was a pretty heated episode so I didn’t really register that I was bringing my first sip of a full glass of Usual’s rosé to my mouth until I audibly gasped. I had the chance to try out both their rosé and brut bottles on a night that my roommate Nina and I were bingeing a few episodes of Unsolved Mysteries. Current options include red, rosé, brut and brut rosé, so there really is a bottle for every kind of wine lover. Usual Wines fills each ultramodern, beaker-shaped bottle with a single serve heavy pour of wine that’s way too easy to fall in love with. And to be quite frank, after having just a couple of sips, this bitch is sold. Usual Wines was kind enough to send me a couple of bottles in order to satisfy my thirst. ![]() Maybe an Instagram ad? I’m not sure how, but, the modern-looking, beaker shape of the single-serving bottles had me intrigued. Though I had been on my wine-tasting quest since January, I only found out about Usual Wine at the beginning of October. But so far nothing has compared to my new go-to solo sipper Usual Wines. I discovered bottles I now love, bottles I now hate and bottles that kind of fall somewhere in between. I went through a variety of new bottles accompanied by way too much reality television. Upon quarantine’s fast arrival and the soft opening of the brand new wine shop 50 feet from my apartment, subbing better wine for my OG $7 choices was almost too convenient. So, when Janucame about and the world was filled with excitement for the new year and unaware of the hellish world to come, I typed up a little resolution list in my Notes app:Īnd, well, it’s safe to say I’ve done one of those things. I don’t even want to get started on the Franzia hangovers. Don’t get me wrong, slapping the bag is a fun pre-COVID party trick I stood by, but, boy oh boy - the hangovers. Now, I look back on those days with a mix of fondness and self-disgust. To be quite honest, I was literally known as the guy that would bring Franzia white zinfandel boxed wine to parties in college, not even bothering with a glass bottle. I am a wine lover through and through, but during my early twenties, I rarely delved beyond my go-to bottom shelf wine brands like Sutter Home, Yellow Tail and Barefoot. I made a pact to myself at the beginning of this year: no more drinking crappy wine. Each product is curated by our editors who want to help you discover cool finds you didn’t know you needed. Spy Finds is a weekly series that unveils the coolest, under-the-radar products that you haven’t heard of until now.
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