Other Blend
186 products
186 products
Wines that don’t fit neatly into a single variety or a conventional blend category — creative combinations from boutique producers across California, Italy, Spain, and beyond. Adventurous pairings that deliver unexpected flavor and complexity outside the usual Cabernet-Merlot or GSM trio.
Browse all wine at Wooden Cork.
Wine labeling categories are built around the most commercially recognizable combinations — Bordeaux blends (Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Cabernet Franc), Rhône-style blends (Grenache, Syrah, Mourvèdre), and Italian blends (Sangiovese-based, Nebbiolo-based). Other Blend collects everything that doesn’t fall into those established categories: a Spanish producer blending Garnacha with Tempranillo in an unusual ratio, a California winemaker combining Zinfandel and Petite Sirah, an Italian estate blending indigenous varieties outside the recognized DOC framework, or a Southern Rhône producer working with less common Carignan or Cinsault proportions. These wines are often where winemakers take the most creative risks, and they frequently offer the best value relative to their quality precisely because they don’t carry the marketing premium of a recognizable category name.
The most useful navigation tool for unconventional blends is the winemaker’s region and stated flavor intent rather than the variety list. A Southern Italian blend from a warm coastal region will lean toward dark fruit and Mediterranean herb character regardless of which specific indigenous varieties are in it. A high-altitude Andean blend from Argentina or Chile will have more structural acidity and mineral character than the varieties’ reputation from other regions might suggest. When the label provides a brief description or the importer’s notes are available, pay attention to whether the wine is described as structured and age-worthy versus approachable and fruit-forward — this will tell you more about what to expect than the variety list on wines outside familiar categories.