▶What is the difference between Old World and New World wines, and how does it affect selection?
Old World wines are from traditional wine-producing regions (France, Italy, Spain, Germany, Portugal); New World wines are from newer regions (California, Australia, Chile, South Africa, New Zealand). Old World wines tend to emphasize terroir (soil, climate, tradition), are often more subtle and age-worthy, have strict regulations (French Burgundy is 100% Pinot Noir), and are priced high due to prestige and scarcity. New World wines tend to be fruit-forward, bold, and approachable, with fewer restrictions, and are often better value-for-money. For pairings, Old World (say, Italian Barolo) pairs well with traditional cuisine (pasta, risotto), while New World (California Cabernet) pairs well with grilled meats and rich sauces. A knowledgeable sommelier offers both: suggest an Old World Burgundy for tradition and elegance, or a New World Pinot Noir for fruit-forward approachability and better value. Know your list and understand both styles so you can guide guests based on their preference and budget.
▶How do I taste wine properly and articulate what I'm detecting?
Systematic tasting: Step 1 — Appearance: color, clarity, viscosity (tears on the glass indicate alcohol/body). Step 2 — Nose: smell the wine, note fruit (cherry, plum, apple, tropical), floral (rose, jasmine), earth (mushroom, soil, leather), wood (vanilla, oak, spice), and fault (cork, vinegar, sulfur). Step 3 — Mouth: sip, note tannins (drying sensation, especially in reds), acidity (brightness, crisp on the tongue), alcohol (warmth, peppery), body (light, medium, full), and finish (how long the flavor lingers). Articulate clearly: 'This wine has bright red-fruit aromas (cherry, raspberry), is medium-bodied with balanced acidity, and has a lingering finish with subtle oak.' Practice tasting 5-10 wines per week and taking notes; your palate and vocabulary improve over time. Many sommeliers taste with colleagues and discuss notes together to refine their ability to detect and describe flavors.
▶A guest says they like red wine and have a £50 budget for 6 people. How do I recommend?
£50 for 6 = ~£8 per person, or likely a £25-35 wine cost (wine list marks up 2.5-3x). Ask clarifying questions: 'What red do you normally prefer? (Lighter Pinot Noir, medium Merlot, bold Cabernet?)' or 'What foods are you eating tonight?' Then offer 2-3 options: '(1) A Côtes-du-Rhône, fruity and approachable, £26. (2) A Spanish Tempranillo, peppery with good structure, £28. (3) A New World Merlot, smooth and full, £32.' Present them enthusiastically but briefly. If they choose one, suggest an upsell only if they seem engaged: 'Would you like a tasting flight of three wines instead, so everyone can explore?' Most guests appreciate guidance that honors their budget and preferences; avoid pushing them to spend more unless they ask.
▶What is natural wine, and should I recommend it?
Natural wine is made with minimal intervention: no added sulfites (or very little), organic or biodynamic grapes, native yeast fermentation (no cultured yeast), and no fining or filtering. The result is often unpredictable: some natural wines are brilliant and complex; others are flawed (too much tannin, unusual flavors, cloudiness). They appeal to adventurous wine lovers who value sustainability and authenticity but are risky for conservative guests. Recommend natural wines selectively: mention them to guests who seem interested in sustainability or novel experiences, but always have a traditional backup option. Never recommend a natural wine as the 'default'; offer it as an alternative. If a guest orders natural wine and is disappointed (finds it unusual or flawed), offer to replace it with a traditional wine without complaint. Natural wine has a devoted following, but it is not for everyone.
▶How do I build and manage a wine list that drives profitability and guest satisfaction?
Strategy: Select wines at multiple price points and styles so every budget and preference is covered. Aim for: 30-40% under £30 (casual, approachable), 40-50% £30-60 (mid-range, popular), 20-30% £60+ (premium, showpieces). Organize by region or style (Burgundy, Bordeaux, Italian, Spanish, New World, etc.) so guests can navigate. Ensure you have high-margin wines (3x markup) mixed with lower-margin prestige (1.5-2x markup) so you can offer both value and profit. Train staff to recommend wines from all tiers confidently; many guests default to safe, expensive choices, not what they actually enjoy. Rotate wines quarterly to showcase seasonal themes and introduce new producers. Educate staff monthly on 5-10 featured wines so they can speak to them knowledgeably. Analyze sales: which wines sell? Which have high margins? Use that data to add more of the winners and phase out slow movers. A well-built list balances guest satisfaction, staff confidence, and profitability.
▶What is the difference between a sommelier and a bartender, and can I transition between them?
Sommelier: expert in still wine, champagne, and wine pairings with food, typically in fine-dining restaurants or wine bars. Bartender: expert in spirits, cocktails, and mixed drinks, typically in bars, hotels, and casual restaurants. Sommeliers focus on education and pairing; bartenders focus on technique and flavor-balance in cocktails. Both are high-skill, high-earning roles. Transition: a sommelier can learn bartending (spirits knowledge, cocktail recipes, mixing technique), but it takes 6-12 months to build speed and muscle memory. A bartender can learn wine (WSET, tasting practice), but wine expertise takes longer (1-2 years for intermediate knowledge). The best beverage professionals have both skills: a sommelier who can make a great cocktail, or a bartender who can pair wine with food. If you want to transition, take formal training and practice during slow shifts at your venue.
▶How do I handle a guest who orders a wine incorrectly (wrong temperature, wrong glass, over-poured, over-oaked, corked)?
Corked wine (moldy, musty smell) or obvious defect: replace immediately without fuss: 'This bottle seems a bit off. Let me bring you a fresh one.' No explanation needed; a professional guest understands wine faults happen. Over-poured (more than 5 oz for still wine, 3 oz for fortified) or wrong temperature (red served too warm, white too cold): correct proactively if you notice before the guest drinks: 'Let me adjust the temperature on this and serve it properly.' Wrong glass (red wine in a white-wine glass or vice versa): replace quietly without drawing attention. If a guest orders a wine that is a poor match for their food (say, a light Pinot Noir with steak), suggest diplomatically: 'This wine is lovely, but I wonder if a fuller-bodied red might pair even better with the steak. Would you like to try [alternative]?' Most guests appreciate the guidance, not judgment. And if the guest is happy with their choice, leave it alone; their experience matters more than what the sommelier would choose.
▶What is the path to becoming a Master Sommelier (MS), and how long does it take?
MS is the highest sommelier credential and is rigorous. Path: (1) WSET Level 1 (10-20 hours study, ~1 week), (2) WSET Level 2 (40-60 hours, ~2-3 weeks), (3) Court of Master Sommeliers Level 1 (Certified Sommelier exam, tasting + theory), (4) Level 2 (Advanced Sommelier, harder theory and tasting), (5) Level 3 (Master Sommelier, infamous difficulty—many attempt, few pass). Most sommeliers complete this over 3-5 years while working full-time in restaurants or wine bars. Total study: 500+ hours, thousands of wine tastings, mentorship, and exam retakes (failure rates are high). Cost: £5,000-10,000 in exam fees, courses, and tasting materials. Reward: MS credential, prestige, job offers at top restaurants and wine merchants, and higher salary (£60k-100k+). Only pursue if you have genuine passion for wine, not just for credentials. Many excellent sommeliers stop at Level 2 (Advanced Sommelier) and are highly compensated and respected.