The best kosher wines for Passover 2015 at all price ranges

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wall of wineAs many have read on these pages, a few wine events have come and gone – with one last one happening in NY, at the City Winery event held in agreement with the Jewish Week and their kosher wine list for Passover (the link is discounted by Yossie’s corkboard). Not to throw the baby out with the bath water, but the list of wines that were chosen for winners this year, are fine and many that I really like, but I hope you all love the wines I have listed here too. As I walked around both KFWE this year, and sommelier – I was asked again for a,list of my top wines, so here it goes! This is a of great and reasonably priced kosher wines.

So, with some weeks before Passover – here is my list. A few caveats first, this is MY list! This is not a list that will make many happy. These wines are the wines that make me happy. No wines here would be considered over ripe, over sweet, or all over the place. The wines here are listed in the order of cost. That said, the top line wines – what I call Top Flight wines, are not defined by cost at all. In that list you can find a 2014 Yarden Sauvignon Blanc, another smash dirt cheap Sauvignon Blanc wine, that happens to be one of the best kosher white wines I tasted at sommelier. At the same time the list includes some of the best high-end kosher wines I have ever tasted that go for $100 or so a bottle. The list of Top Flight wines, are ALL wines that I would buy without hesitation, no matter the cost (if I can afford it of course).

Passover is time of year when Jews buy the most wine, along with Rosh Hashanah, and the American New Year. That is why all the kosher wine events happened a month or two before the Passover festival. It gives the wineries and distributors a chance to showcase all their wines that each appeal to different market segments. So, no there are no sweet or semi-sweet baseline wines here. There are many very good 15 or so dollar bottles of wine, that can be bought at Skyview, Gotham, and all the other wine stores I have listed on the right hand side (as always I NEVER make money from them and I never know or care what people buy, the list is whom I buy wines from and so I can recommend them to others).

Also, the amount of money you spend does not define the value or quality of the wine. Take for example the 24 dollar Lewis Pasco Project #2 wine – a very nice wine, and though not as insane as the #1 it is a great wine that is easily enjoyable now and sells for a great price. The same goes for the Vignobles David Reserve or the Capcanes Peraj petita, and many others.

Seeing the list and checking it twice (could not help myself), I am sure there will be a question – what defines a wine as a Top Flight wine and why are there wines that are not on it? The Top Flight wines, is a list of wines that personally was wowed when tasting them. That does not mean that the Peraj Petita, as wonderful as it is may or may not compare to another wine on the 50 dollar and above list – that would not be fair. What it does mean was that when I tasted it, I was wowed, and I said this is a wine that everyone should get – no matter the price. In the end, this is not about which is better than the rest it is a way to whittle down the list of wines that I enjoyed from a massive set of thousands of kosher wines available here in America. That is why I made the list. In hindsight, I am sure I will have missed some wines, but you can be always look at the blog and if a wine you want is not on the list, by my omission, but scored an A- or higher, it was probably a good bet to have been on this list.

Finally, it is our custom to drink four cups of wine on Passover, but to power down these wines is far to hard for me. I rather decide to drink simple wines like the Tabor Via bubbly red, non mevushal wine. It is simple to chug, tasty, and perfectly fulfills the custom. For the main course, I am happy to open a Top Flight wine and enjoy that at a calm and enjoyable pace.

A few more comments here. I hope I have gotten all the wines that I have tasted here, but I almost posted this a few times, and then only at the end did I remember I forgot a few. Also, this year’s list is far longer, for a few reasons. One, I was far more careful and I tried to include all wines I tasted that were A- or maybe a drop below, AKA 90 point wines. Also, I have gotten to taste more wines as every year passes. Still, I am sure I missed a few. When I taste them – I will post them! Finally, there are more better wines this year. Many from Israel but France has finally stepped up with new vintages, along with Spain killing it as always, whites from Israel, and Cali really showing strong this year as well.

In the end, these are my picks, they are easy to find and in my opinion, really good. There is also the Jewish Week’s list and Yossie Horwitz (of Yossie’s Corkboard) also comes out with a list.

So there you have it – enjoy good kosher wine for a reasonable price and enjoy the Passover holiday for what it should be, which is enjoying time and our heritage with our families! Happy Passover to you all. Post what wine you will be enjoying, I would love to hear from you guys on what you will be drinking throughout the holiday!

Wines below 20 dollars:

2012/2013/2014 Domaine Netofa White 2014 Domaine Netofa Rose (QPR) (the 2013 is dying) 2012/2013 Domaine Netofa Red 2012 Yarden Chardonnay, Odem Vineyard 2011/2012 Weinstock Petite Sirah, cellar select (mad QPR) (mevushal) 2012 Weinstock Cabernet Franc, Cellar Select (mad QPR) (mevushal) 2012/2013 Capcanes peraj petita (mevushal & non mevushal) (QPR) 2013/2014 Tabor Sauvignon Blanc, Adama 2014 Tabor Rose (QPR) EPIC! 2013 Goose Bay Sauvignon Blanc (mevushal) 2013 Goose Bay Fume Blanc (QPR) (mevushal) 2012 Baron Herzog Cabernet Sauvignon, Paso (QPR)  (mevushal) 2011/12 Dalton Alma, Cabernet and Merlot 2011/12 Dalton Petite Sirah (QPR) 2011/2012 Le Mourre De Lisle Cotes du Rhone(mevushal) (QPR) 2010 Chateau d’Arveyres (QPR) (mevushal) 2013 Beit El Cabernet Sauvignon 2013/14 Hagafen Sauvignon Blanc (mevushal) 2014 Hagafen beret rose (mevushal) 2011 Elvi Rioja Mati (AKA Herenza Rioja) NV Elvi Adar Brut (mevushal) (QPR) 2014 Gush Etzion Sauvignon Blanc 2013 Gush Etzion Spring River (five white grapes) 2013 Twin Suns Cabernet Sauvignon (mevushal) 2009 Terra di Seta Chianti Classico 2012 Alfasi Malbec/Syrah, reserve (mevushal) – do NOT laugh solid! 2013 O’dwyers Creek Sauvignon Blanc (mevushal) 2011/12 Teperberg Malbec, Terra

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  1. Elliot Lowy Avatar

    Most important article of the year. 🙂

    Elie Lowy

    Louis Newman & Company P 212-719-2626 F 212-764-4329 http://www.louisnewman.com

  2. winemusings Avatar

    Thanks Elie! I agree and a ton of fun to cultivate!

  3. Elliot Lowy Avatar

    I don’t get the 10 tabor ADAMa merlot. I like it. But it tastes like a mevushal wine to me. It opens up right away. And has no finish. No complexity. The fruit is good at best. I want you to taste my bottle when ur in town and explain it or tell me if mine is consistent with the one you have tasted. Don’t get me wrong. I like it. But I don’t see what everyone sees in it.

    Elie Lowy

    Louis Newman & Company P 212-719-2626 F 212-764-4329 http://www.louisnewman.com

    1. winemusings Avatar

      Elie, you are the second person to make that statement, which scares me. That wine is one of the most closed wines on the market today. But others have had your experience! It is shocking to me and others who have had this wine a few times now. I believe your bottle(s) are bad. Return them and get others, this is NOT what I have experienced with them.

  4. grapestoglass2012@gmail.com Avatar

    Sorry for not knowing (and not asking until now) but what does QPR stand for? Ty

    1. winemusings Avatar

      Quality to Price Ratio – meaning a great wine for the price

  5. Yekutiel Avatar

    Thanks for doing this. I always find something new and exciting on the yearly list. I agree with you Israeli date juice drift so would be curious to try the French reds.

    1. Yekutiel Avatar

      …agree with you regarding the Israeli…

      1. winemusings Avatar

        Thanks for the kind words, and try the figeac or the fourcas, two reasonably priced French options

  6. […] to recap, the wines I loved over Shabbos, are on the top wines for Passover post, and they […]

  7. […] With that kind of focus on quality, to be fair it could be understood how the rest of the wines were not really up to par with other entry-level wines from wineries around the world creating great QPR wines; like Dalton, Recanati, Elvi Winery, and others. But slowly, starting in 2010 things have changed. To be fair, 2010 and 2011 were tough years. The real change is clearly evident in the 2012 vintage. This is where fruit from higher end vineyards started making their way into the lower level Herzog baseline wines, and what an improvement! First of all, the Weinstock Cellar Select, are perennial QPR winners on my yearly lists and starting this year, the 2012 Cab appeared on my 2015 list. […]

  8. […] Look at Wine Spectator, look at Wine Enthusiast, they routinely have 89 to 90 scored wines fro under 10 dollars, trust me, that is close to unheard of in the kosher world. We are talking the same vines, overhead, winery costs, u name it. So why are the costs of kosher wines so high? The simple answer is cash flow. In my humble opinion, and I have heard this over and over again, the reason why baseline wines are expensive is cash flow. Now, we are not even talking about good baseline wines, forget those! Seriously! Except for the Herzog 2012 Cab, there is no wine under 10 bucks that makes my top wines of the year – NADA! […]

  9. […] of kosher wine consumers. Look at the options that Elvi has in that price range, and the wines that I have listed on my 25 and less kosher wine for 2015. There is the awesome Herenza Crainza, then there is the Herenza Semi, followed by the Adar bubbly, […]

  10. […] my list of top wines for Passover continues to expand, but so do the number of wines available – and there is the rub. While the list […]

  11. […] that is not to say that the options do not exist, as you can see by the number of QPR options on my top wines for Passover last year. Still, given the sheer number of wines in a kosher wine store (many hundreds) and the number of […]

  12. […] has become my goto white wine QPR winery – hands down, while more and more of their reds are joining my yearly Passover list as […]

  13. […] Via Kosherwinemusings.com: “The Best Kosher Wines for Passover 2015 At All Price Ranges” […]

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