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Red Wine Temperatures

Forget “room temperature.” That phrase comes from 18th-century European cellars, where room temperature was about 14–16°C. Modern heated rooms are 20–22°C, way too warm for any red wine. Even big reds shouldn't go above 18°C.

Specific temperatures: Light reds (Pinot Noir, light Malbec, Beaujolais) — 12–14°C (cellar cool). Medium-bodied reds (Cab Franc, Bonarda, classic Malbec) — 14–16°C. Full-bodied reds (icon Malbec, Cab Sauv, Tannat, Syrah) — 16–18°C. NEVER above 20°C — alcohol dominates, fruit disappears.

The easiest fix: put your “room temperature” red in the fridge for 20 minutes before serving. The wine drops about 5°C and becomes itself. Or use a small ice bucket for 10 minutes. You're not chilling it like white wine, just bringing it down to its actual ideal.

A glass of Malbec resting on a cellar shelf
Cellar cool — what “room temperature” originally meant.