REFERENCE ARTICLE
First bottle for someone who only drinks white: aromatic
guidanceA guide to starting aromatic white drinkers with expressive but balanced bottles like Riesling, Gewurztraminer-adjacent styles, and Torrontes.
## The safe first bottle
My default for someone who says they only drink white is not to challenge them with the most famous bottle in the category. It is to give them a clean win in the lane they already like. For the aromatic lane, start with dry or lightly off-dry Riesling, Gewurztraminer-adjacent Alsace whites, Torrontes, or Moschofilero. That style gives enough character to feel intentional, but it does not ask a new drinker to wrestle with oak, heat, bitterness, or hard tannin before they know what they enjoy.
## Why it works
Aromatic white drinkers are usually chasing perfume: citrus peel, flowers, herbs, peach, ginger, or spice. The trick is to keep the wine balanced so the perfume does not become syrupy or soapy. The point is not to prove that wine is complicated. The point is to make the first glass feel easy, specific, and repeatable. A good first bottle should have a clear shape: what it smells like, how heavy it feels, whether it is dry or sweet, and what food makes it better. Once a drinker can name that shape, Scott can move them one click wider without guessing.
## How to buy it
On a shelf, ask for the style first and the producer second. Say, "I want a aromatic white wine in the dry or lightly off-dry Riesling, Gewurztraminer-adjacent Alsace whites, Torrontes, or Moschofilero family, something clean and representative, not the oakiest or ripest bottle here." If the shop is strong, the staff will know the local importer or producer that fits. If you are shopping alone, look for recent releases, moderate alcohol for the category, and back labels that talk about freshness, fruit, mineral snap, or savory structure rather than luxury language.
Price should be treated as a band, not a promise. There are often good examples in the everyday shelf, but shipping, taxes, and small-production bottlings can move the same style up or down. Do not chase the cheapest bottle if it looks anonymous. Spend a little of the budget on typicity -- the bottle should taste like the thing it claims to be.
## What to avoid
Avoid bottles that smell huge but finish flat. Also avoid assuming aromatic means sweet; many aromatic whites are dry, and some sweet examples are balanced by serious acidity. A first bottle should not be a dare. Skip anything that advertises extreme oak, extreme alcohol, novelty sweetness, or a collector tone. If the drinker already likes those things, fine, but they are not the best starting point for learning the style.
## Food and next step
Pair with Thai herbs, Vietnamese salads, roast pork, spicy noodles, Indian snacks, or washed-rind cheese. Aroma helps the wine keep up with fragrant food. If the bottle works, the next step is simple: stay in the same lane and move one variable. For white, that might mean changing country, changing grape, or changing weight while keeping the same dry/sweet profile. If the bottle misses, use the miss as data. Too sharp suggests more body; too heavy suggests more acidity; too plain suggests a more aromatic grape. A useful fallback is dry Chenin Blanc, Vermentino, or a lighter Muscat-based dry white.
REFERENCE NOTE
Owner-provided article material. Editorially prepared for Encyclopedia of Wine. Third-party ratings and reviews are not used.