Your Free Pass to the World of Wine

How to use this Website

The absolute best way to use this website is to follow along every day and keep reading what you’ve missed since you last logged on. Posts on this blog run from bottom to top in order of what’s most recent, so you may have to scroll down a bit to find where you last left off.

But maybe you don’t want to read every single entry? That’s ok too. Then you might find the table of contents useful. You can look through there and see what interests you most. The main headings are the ones that aren’t indented, and those are probably a good place to start. If you click on those, you’ll see a list of every post in that chapter. The posts will be abbreviated, but if you just click on the links you’ll see, you can expand the whole post.

You can also enter your email address in the box on the right hand side where it says “Get email updates on this blog” and you’ll receive each and every post in your inbox. You can change your viewing preferences so you might see a daily or weekly digest of new posts, rather than getting every post one by one as they’re updated.

It doesn’t really matter what order you read the posts in, because I’m going to be linking everything together. So if you read a post that has a term you don’t understand, and I’ve already covered it, there will be a link to the previous post that should explain everything. If there’s no link there, and you don’t understand something, I’d love it you let me know!

Wine Scholarship is a wine blog that educates wine lovers, wine enthusiasts, wine scholars, and anyone else who wants to learn about wine. Wine studies usually cost money. Here, you can study wine for free. Free wine studies is a great thing, isn't it? Here you'll find information about wine making, vinification, grape varieties, vitis vinifera, malolactic fermentation, oak aging, Chardonnay, Riesling, Cabernet-Sauvignon, Merlot, Shiraz, Sauvignon Blanc, Napa, Eden Valley, Clare Valley, Malrborough, Bourdeaux, Burgundy, French wines, Italian wines, Spanish wines, and more. Wine tasting is something that can be hard to do if you don't have a professor teaching you how to drink and how to taste. While this website will be helpful in your studying, you should always seek the advice of a professional if you really want to get serious about a career in wine.