Andy J. Scott
Marissa A. Ross is a writer, humorist, and leisure enthusiast. She is a contributing editor and the official wine columnist for Bon Apptit; author of the award-winning blog Wine. All the Time.; and has written online for Saveur, Elle,Man Repeller, Pitchfork, and VICEs Munchies. Aside from day drinking and night drinking, she enjoys sunbathing, midcentury everything, and true crime. A born and bred Californian, Marissa has never left and lives on the West Coast with her husband, pets, and a stack of Slim Aaronss coffee-table books.
Copyright 2017 by Marissa A. Ross
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Introduction
Im just going to get this out of the way: I am not a sommelier. People always assume that I am when they learn Im a wine columnist, and I dont blame them. Those are two very logical dots to connect, like A to B or Nate Dogg to Mr. Warren G. No one hears that Im a wine columnist and is like, Oh, shit! So you must be a college-dropout comedy writer, then! Being a college-dropout-comedy-writer-turned-wine-columnist doesnt have quite the same ring to it as saw-muhl-yay, but on the bright side, I didnt have to take any tests to earn the title and people can actually pronounce it. The important thing to take away from this is that despite my lack of formal education in this world, it eventually led me to writing the book you now hold in your hands: an unconventional, unpretentious guide to wine that I hope will help you become a more confident, more adventurous drinker.
Because you dont need to be a sommelier to know your way around wine. That notion is as insane as telling someone they need to go to film school to have a good time at the movies. Sure, it helps if youre interested in directing Scorsese-style tracking shots one day, but you dont have to be top of your class at NYU with a brand-new beret to be entertained by Goodfellas. And yet, weve all been made to feel that way about wine at one point or another, whether its been while browsing the shelves of a stuffy wine shop, being side-eyed at a dinner party for throwing some ice in your Sauv Blanc, or being winesplained by your hard-liner in-law.
Wine is for everyone, and anyone can learn about it. It isnt this sacred subject surmountable by only a handful of human aroma indexes. That might be true if youre trying to sniff out specific French slopes in glasses of Smillon, but most people out there are just trying to find a reasonably priced Pinot Noir. And for that, you do not need to know everything. You need to know the basics of tasting, so you can describe what you like. You need to know the basics of how wine is made and the effects of regions, so you can recognize patterns in the wines you like. And you need to know the basics of buying wine, so you can buy more of those wines you like, instead of shopping with your fingers crossed. This may seem like a lot right now, but you can totally do it. I know this because I totally did it.
When I started off my writing career, I was a blogger with a reputation as a freewheeling wino with a proclivity for cursing and little regard for open-container laws. When Molly McAleer started HelloGiggles in 2011, she suggested I do a video series reviewing all the shitty wines I drank. Thus, Wine Time was born, the show where a woman who has absolutely no qualifications to be reviewing wine, aside from the fact that she drinks it every day, reviews wine. I studied the steps of tasting and approached each wine like it was a $200 unicorn bottle rather than a $2 dusty bottle from House of Spirits. I inspected the color and clarity, swirled and assessed the bouquet, took three sips, and then I chugged it, a step I declared the Ross Test.
After ten episodes of reviewing wines under $10, I came to the conclusion that all wines under $10 tasted like all other wines under $10. I was bored, but thirsty for more. I had never thought of tasting wines before Wine Time, and suddenly that was all I could think about. Rather than just chugging to get drunk, I found myself studying each bottle, wondering if it smelled like summer or winter. I began to go through the motions of tasting at dinner, at parties, and while writing. And it dawned on me. I couldnt shoot live wine reviews every day, but I could certainly write them.
I started my blog Wine. All the Time. in 2012 and something just clicked. It was as if I had given myself permission to do what I had secretly, deep down wanted to do this whole time. To sit and be present with wine, to smell it and taste it, and to feel and just daydream. With each wine, Id spend hours reading and researching, teaching myself about varietals and regions and winemaking, and writing my reviews, for no particular reason except that I enjoyed doing it. Virtually no one read it for years, but I didnt care. The blog was for me, for those few moments of peace, for that feeling of somewhere else.
In February 2015, I got an e-mail from New York Magazine for an interview with Grub Street about Wine Time. I was flattered and excited, but I didnt think much of it. By this point, Id been working as Mindy Kalings assistant for four years and had written enough scripts, taken enough meetings, and performed in enough UCB Theatre storytelling shows to never get my hopes up about anything. Not even like, Oh, this could be great! Wait, better not get my hopes up. Just no hopes. Zero. Like it didnt even cross my mind that this interview about my wine writing and videos could be the thing that launched my dream career.
A week after the interview went up, I had a literary agent and started the proposal for this book. By June, I had quit my job, was writing for VICEs Munchies, won the Editors Choice and the Readers Choice for Best Wine Coverage at the Saveur Blog Awards, and sold this book. And that December, out of nowhere, my favorite magazine offered me a job as their wine columnist.
The moral of the story is, if I can go from chugging $2 Cabernet on the Internet to writing about wine professionally for