June 27, 2026
winespeed-by-karen-macneil

Hi Matt,

Yes, it can. Certain flavors are associated with coolness even if the entity in question is at room temperature. For example, spearmint, cucumbers, lemons, and menthol are all usually perceived as having a cooling character, even if they are not actually cool temperature-wise. Similarly, but at the opposite end of the scale, baked fruit flavors can seem warming. A wine with baked cherry flavors can seem “warmer” than a wine with crunchy fresh cherry flavors (which can seem cool), even if both wines are the same temperature. This is why certain red wines can be described as “cooling” even though the wine itself has not been chilled.

Why So Much Italian Wine?

In the United States, most of the wine that’s imported is Italian. In 2025 some 93.2 million gallons of Italian wine were imported into this country. In fact, Italian wine has led US imports for decades, hitting a peak in 2021 with 43% of all US table wine imports. Is it because Italian wine is just so good? I love lots of Italian wine, but I’m sure “goodness” has nothing to do with it. What does? The following content is accessible for members only, please sign in.

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