Brodie Meah, co-founder of Top Cuvée, reveals how one neighborhood restaurant in Highbury became the foundation for a "wine for everyone" movement that achieved national distribution.Starting in 2019 with 40 covers nightly, Top Cuvée's journey from restaurant to retail to wholesale exemplifies bottom-up brand building.Having witnessed fine dining's intimidation tactics firsthand in Melbourne, Brodie flipped the industry's most exclusive phrase:"top cuvée" (wines deemed too good for regular guests) into a symbol of accessibility.The COVID pivot unlocked game-changing insights: wine labels matter enormously in retail but not restaurants, £8 glasses translate to £22 retail bottles, and wine's aversion to "openly commercial" marketing creates opportunity.By building trust glass by glass, turning regulars into brand ambassadors, and proving neighborhood hospitality can scale, Top Cuvée transformed from one Highbury restaurant to shops to national wholesale—keeping "wine for everyone" real.Timestamps:00:00 From Fine Dining to "Wine for Everyone" Philosophy03:00 One Restaurant to National Distribution Journey06:00 Wine Intimidation and the Leather Entrance Story09:30 Flipping "Top Cuvée" from Exclusive to Inclusive12:00 Why Wine Bars Shouldn't Feel Educational15:00 Building Community - The T-Shirt Customer Story18:00 Labels Matter in Shops, Not Restaurant Lists21:00 The £8 Glass = £22 Bottle Sweet Spot24:00 Wine's "Dirty Word" Marketing Problem27:00 Trust Engines and Part Two Preview
Brodie Meah, co-founder of Top Cuvée, reveals how one neighborhood restaurant in Highbury became the foundation for a "wine for everyone" movement that achieved national distribution.
Starting in 2019 with 40 covers nightly, Top Cuvée's journey from restaurant to retail to wholesale exemplifies bottom-up brand building.
Having witnessed fine dining's intimidation tactics firsthand in Melbourne, Brodie flipped the industry's most exclusive phrase:"top cuvée" (wines deemed too good for regular guests) into a symbol of accessibility.
The COVID pivot unlocked game-changing insights: wine labels matter enormously in retail but not restaurants, £8 glasses translate to £22 retail bottles, and wine's aversion to "openly commercial" marketing creates opportunity.
By building trust glass by glass, turning regulars into brand ambassadors, and proving neighborhood hospitality can scale, Top Cuvée transformed from one Highbury restaurant to shops to national wholesale—keeping "wine for everyone" real.
Timestamps:
00:00 From Fine Dining to "Wine for Everyone" Philosophy
03:00 One Restaurant to National Distribution Journey
06:00 Wine Intimidation and the Leather Entrance Story
09:30 Flipping "Top Cuvée" from Exclusive to Inclusive
12:00 Why Wine Bars Shouldn't Feel Educational
15:00 Building Community - The T-Shirt Customer Story
18:00 Labels Matter in Shops, Not Restaurant Lists
21:00 The £8 Glass = £22 Bottle Sweet Spot
24:00 Wine's "Dirty Word" Marketing Problem
27:00 Trust Engines and Part Two Preview
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For founders, directors, distributor MDs, and hospitality leaders navigating the tension between bottom-up reality and top-down expectations.
20+ years building brands across 30+ markets. Each episode features drinks builders: founders, distributors, commercial directors, sharing how the drinks industry actually works. Not the conference version. Honest conversations.
Insights come from sitting at the bar.
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This is my favorite drinks.
In today's episode, I talked to
Brody Mia.
This is a very interesting
episode because I talked to a
founder that has actually
created an on trade venues or a
restaurant in this in this case.
And then during COVID, he
pivoted into a retail and at the
same time then he created his
own wine brand.
And that's where we learned a
lot about the look of a bottle
because, you know, in
restaurants, doesn't matter what
the wine looks like because it's
on the wine list.
So labels really not important
visual.
But in retail and e-commerce,
it's like the biggest thing.
We talk about the bottom up
trade, so all the venues where
you can actually tell a story
and really build brands.
So in this case, what Brody does
is very much aligned to the to
the bottom up trades or whether
he's a restaurant or a retailer,
there is always this element of
speaking to customers and having
someone to actually guide that
conversation.
Brody talks about his experience
of working in fine dining
establishments and how he
developed his own concept with
with the philosophy of wine for
everyone.
So wine shouldn't be anything on
only for the elite.
Going to a wine bar shouldn't
feel like an educational
experience.
We talk about how to make this
kind of bottom up trading
establishment welcoming for
guests and for buyers shoppers.
Making people feel
uncomfortable.
And that's exactly what I mean
about the intimidation factor
that exists.
We never take it there.
If you want, then you can ask us
and then we'll give you all the
information that you desire.
And then we talk about the
differences between marketing
wine and spirits and beer and
how does that changes into into
different perspectives.
So I don't want to spoil the
episode.
Let's dive in now.
Hi, Brody, welcome to the My
Fair Drinks podcast.
Hey Chris, thanks for having me.
That's a honour to have you.
I've been following your
journey.
I was just telling you from the
old COVID days when I was
studying the UK market and
trying to understand what was
happening and how brands were
working, our own trade was
working.
So it's a pleasure to have you
and host you.
Yeah, thanks.
The dark times for the UK and
the world obviously, but
actually for us, we made the
most of it and tried to spread a
lot of positive energy during
that time.
Fantastic.
So let's start, let's dive in.
I want to start with giving a
bit of an introduction about Top
Cove.
Can you explain for the
listeners what is Top Cove and
how you start?
And now it's developing.
And then I'll ask you For more
information on different topics
that we'll discuss today.
Yeah, absolutely.
So Kentucky, they started as a
local neighborhood restaurant
back in 2019.
I think that's all we ever
wanted to be.
That was my background in
hospitality with my whole life
in hospitality and moved to
London, start my own business
and opened a restaurant.
It was going amazingly well.
We built a little community in
Highbury in North London.
And then just when it got to the
stage where we were like, OK,
this is actually working, you
know, we can pay the bills like
we've been over in a year, we've
got regulars, COVID had
happened.
So that was that's first big
test and we pivoted to retail
during that time immediately.
That went extremely well.
And that's due to our community
for sure.
So we were very lucky with the
time that we just built up
enough people that were not
wanting to support us and they
did in a in a very big way.
And and yeah, like I said in the
intro there, we focused on that
time just about the positivity.
We've been our little
neighborhood and that really
resonated with people.
So we stuck with that positive
message and that's allowed us to
grow that retail side of the
business to brick and mortar
stores in addition to our
restaurant, which is still open.
And then I suppose that was
quite a few years ago now, even
though it feels like yesterday.
So over the years of running
from hospitality, then adding in
retail, e-commerce was also
happening alongside and still
is.
We wanted to continue to scale
the kind of wine side of our
operation that led us to working
directly with some brilliant
wine makers and that opened the
kind of door to the realities
of, well, if we're going to be
importing wine, we need to
increase our volume of sales.
So that's where we started
looking into wholesale, built a
little wholesale part of our
business.
And then I suppose the natural
evolution of that was into more
of a branded portfolio of
products that we now distribute
through our own channels and to
many of us.
Wow, that's a journey.
Yeah.
You're basically touching all
the, you know, many of the sides
of the what I call the drinks
ecosystem, right?
Yeah, that's it.
I think sometimes I've said it
like, oh, it's like a mini
version of Diageo, which sounds
stupid, but kind of is.
You know, we've got brand and it
wasn't intentional.
You know, we didn't say, oh,
that's what we want to do, but
it's just it's kind of where
we've ended up and it's really
working for us, you know, it's
great.
So let's take a step back
because what I was reading about
you love the fact that you come
from a fine dining background
previously, but now the slogan
or the motto or the philosophy
behind top cuvees, wine for
everyone.
Can you walk us through this
change and this journey?
Absolutely.
So when I was working in fine
dining, it was amazing.
You know, that was a really
critical part of my education as
a entrepreneur and also just as
a service professional working
for some incredible venues.
So don't forget these venues get
to be where they are because
they're like so on it like
university for someone that
wants to work in the industry, I
think if you can work in one of
the world's best restaurants,
you'll learn a lot about how to
run a restaurant, but also how
to run a business and learn a
lot about life and how to be
disciplined and all of that.
So that's like loads of
positives I took away from my
time working in fine dining.
And then the more negative side,
which is after being there for a
while and the kind of glitz and
glamour starts to wear off and
then you just kind of know what
you're doing there.
I know it's like fine dining
culture was inherently anti
customer.
That's how I describe it.
So we have these big grand rooms
and the restaurant I was working
at at the time in Australia had
an entrance way that was like
literally made of leather.
And you walked up and it was
dark and it had a certain aroma
and yeah, it was an intimidating
thing to walk into.
Obviously it was all part of the
show, right?
Then you walk in and the door
was open, there'd be 3 people
stood in suits.
Everything was just very grand
and very fancy.
But what I noticed from my time
working there over the years,
it's like most people were like
really intimidated and
uncomfortable.
So you spend a lot of your time
trying to calm people down and
trying to make people feel
relaxed.
And then obviously you'd show
them a really kind of good time.
But it just, it didn't make
sense to me why we're making
something feel so out of touch
and, and difficult to
unaccessible when really what
we're trying to do is show
people a good time.
And that was like the basis of
of Top Cuvee.
That's how the name came about.
Because one of the sommeliers I
used to work with, if there was
a really fancy and exclusive
wine, he would be like, no, no,
no, this is the top cuvee.
And that meant, you know, this
is not for you.
This is the good stuff.
OK, so this is the top, top
Cuvee.
You cannot have it.
So yeah, that was kind of when
we wanted to create a restaurant
that was like accessible to
everyone.
We just took that phrase and
then made sure that the branding
and like the logo and everything
and the service was super the
opposite of that, you know, very
welcoming, approachable.
That's why we have our kind of
cartoon fonts and how our
language.
That's fantastic.
I mean, what I really, it really
resonates with me because this
is one of the thing, you know,
for the listeners, you know, I'm
usually talking much more about
spirits and it just happens, you
know, it's not, there's no line.
I love all sort of drinks.
And you know, with the name of
her drinks, I try to be
inclusive of all alcoholic and
all alcoholic wine, beers and,
and spirits.
And that's why I love to have
this conversation with you
because today we'll talk more
about wines.
And this is one of the things
that I'm often finding and
discussing in the podcast about
cocktail culture nowadays, you
know, and cocktail bars that
feel they are taking that part
of the fine dining experience
and they are making it so
exclusive, which is great in a
way and grand in a way.
But at the same time, it feels
very intimidating and very
austere.
It's all about me making the
drinks, you know, or it's all
about me, the chef, you know,
you are coming to see me.
And it's almost like, you know,
shut up and listen.
I will, I will guide you through
a journey which is not
ultimately what people want,
let's say at scale.
I mean, obviously you may be in
that mood for certain
anniversaries or birthdays or so
on, but also, you know, you want
to make that journey inclusive.
One of the things that I'm
discussing lately in the podcast
is about how do we scale
drinking culture in a positive
way.
Obviously not in getting wasted,
but in a positive drinking,
learning the history, learning
the things, but also scaling.
Because otherwise, if we don't
make it accessible to everyone
in obviously legal drinking age,
it stays niche.
It stays very posh and
exclusive.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And I totally get that.
One thing that I would say to
people that worth it our venues
is, you know, going to a wine
bar shouldn't feel like an
educational experience.
And oftentimes people like, oh,
yeah, true.
And we've all been there.
You know, my favorite example is
you go for a catch up with your
friends, it's after work, you've
got time for two quick drinks
you get from the bar.
What do you want?
You want a drink that tastes
good and you want to catch up
with your friend.
The drink is additional, it's
supplementary and it's great.
Obviously you want good quality
and to enjoy that.
But the real reason that you're
catching up with someone, it's
like social connection.
And I think some people would do
well to remember that when
they're working and and serving
people.
You know, it's like, what do you
want?
Like when you're like a wait
tonight, I say, oh, what's your
fancy drinking?
And then I'll just, I don't
know, like glass of wine, Fine,
but OK, So what are you feeling?
I wasn't like, I just want
something that tastes nice and
I'll catch up with my mate here.
But so often, especially in the
more exclusive kind of high end
of of the market, it's like, oh,
you're going to get a whole
history of this domain and it's
just not, you know, it's good.
Then you need to know that when
you're working in the industry,
like you have to be
professional, you have to have
that knowledge, but.
I think it's, I'm always talking
about occasions now, you know,
different type of occasions.
And it's about, I discussed this
with Federico Rietzo's and it's
an earlier episode and you know,
I'm discussing the fact that,
you know, you need to read the
guest and read the room, you
know, and sometimes you also
don't want to kind of embarrass
that guest.
And, and specifically when we're
talking wines or spirits, you
may come with your, you know,
friends or partner or whoever
that is.
And you don't want to look like,
you know, you don't want to look
silly with someone.
It may be a first date with
someone, you know, And then all
of a sudden, you know, if I put
you on the spot, you know, what
do you like or not?
That drink is not for you.
And you know, there's so much
often there.
There's a very thin line between
welcoming people and going a
little bit off, pissed on that.
Making people feel
uncomfortable.
And that's exactly what I mean
about the intimidation factor
that exists.
We never take it there.
If you want, then you can ask us
and then we'll give you all the
information that you desire.
If you join us in one of our
venues, we're going to assume
that you trust us as well.
We have to build up the trust in
the 1st place to be able to be
so nonchalant about it all.
We believe that you trust us to
have quality products on our
menu.
So therefore we're not going to
shove it down your throat.
You know, that knowledge, if you
want it, please ask us.
We love to talk about it.
We're going to assume that most
people don't.
And I'll be honest though, you
know, we've been open for five
years and I think we're pretty
confident now that we're right.
Most people, they just want to
drink something tasty and have a
good time.
And, you know, maybe they get
one fact about something and
they can they say, Oh yeah, that
guy knew his stuff.
It's not easy to do something
simple.
That's the trick, you know, so
the moment you manage to
simplify what you do and how you
explain things, then that's the
moment where you give this, I
mean, what they call social
currency, you know, so that
guest can show off with their
partner or friends or colleague
next time.
And then maybe they'll bring you
in and say, Oh yeah, let's have
that wine, that blah, blah,
blah, blah.
You know, and it's three simple
things rather than the Chateau
and all the glamorous stuff,
which is fine on certain type of
other venues.
But let me ask you about this,
you know, the the journey from
on to off tree now because you,
you know, it sounds like you did
a very bottom up in the in the
in that sense, you know.
Yeah, yeah, it's very different.
It's blessing and the curse for
us because you know, like
hopefully it comes across so we
really understand that our
customers at the table, you
know, like we know how to serve
people and make them happy in a
face to face scenario.
And that is really, really
important to us.
That's one of our core values as
a company that we just say
everyone leaves happy no matter
what any situation.
That's like one thing that we
always just focus on on the
journey into more of a kind of
drinks brand now where we've
like more of a product business
that it's incredibly easy to
make people happy when they're
sat in front of you.
Whereas what we're trying to do
now is how do we make keep that
core value and bottle that and
provide people the same
experience.
But now we're not able to talk
to them.
You know, I think our first
experience of how difficult that
was was with e-commerce.
So when we first started
e-commerce, it was really busy
and we were doing lots of
orders.
And with that obviously comes
lots of challenges, you know,
with like shipping and delayed
orders and stuff like that.
And at first we were so
devastated with every single,
any issue with an order.
We were like, Oh my God, this is
a nightmare because we couldn't
fix it immediately.
It just, yeah, it's a very
different customer service kind
of challenge.
And then once you go one step
further, it actually comes into
the communication, I think, and
the storytelling that you have,
right.
So with those first two
examples, it's pure customer
service.
And then once you've got your
brand, product, business, it's
it's how do you set people's
expectations without being able
to talk to them?
And it's really challenging.
It probably sounds like what it
is.
You know, this is a big learning
experience for us that we're
just working through now.
And that's why I think it's a
little bit backwards because
it's bottom up where we've come
from hospitality.
But now we're like got these
products, we know how to sell
them face to face, but we're
navigating the world of a
branding and brand building
really I think is the that's
like a really interesting
challenge.
And you know, while we've got
all this ammunition and
information and, and everything,
it's really difficult to sort of
tie that all together.
Whereby if we started from the
other way around where we get
OK, we're designing this brand
and then we're going to open
shops and then do retail, I feel
that would have been maybe
easier, but just not as fun and
not as genuine.
Yeah, it sounds very familiar to
me because it's, you know, now
that you were saying this, it
made me think of my life now
because, you know, I'm with the
newsletter, with the post that I
write about the with the
podcast.
It's very challenging for me
because I sometimes I feel like
I'm speaking to a void.
Then I see, obviously I see
stats and I see people reaching
out, but that's a handful of the
people that actually listen.
And you know, for example, I
just discovered that you were a
listener, which I didn't know
about because I see a number, I
see a someone from London
listening.
I don't see, you know, Brody,
And it's very fascinating when
you see that from a trade
perspective, which is the moment
that you're speaking to a guest,
you understand, you can
navigate, you get this instant
feed loop because then it's
like, oh, do you like red or
white or do you like this one?
Or do you like it fruity?
And do you want to be on
whatever Italian or Spanish or
French or, you know, is it like
in a country of origin?
Is it a special grape?
Is it?
And then you can instantly get
that, but you are not there
where people are clicking on a
website or, or maybe if they're,
you know, if they're sitting in
front of a shelf and they just
look at the shelf and they, you
have no idea what's going on in
their brain because they are,
they're not speaking to the
shelf.
Yeah.
And that's where we learn a lot
about like visual, just like the
look of a bottle because, you
know, in restaurants, doesn't
matter what the wine looks like
because it's on the wine list.
So labels really not important
visual.
But in retail and e-commerce,
it's like the biggest thing.
And no one likes to really admit
that.
And certainly in the specialist
kind of wine trade, you know,
it's like fancy labels.
It's just gimmick, like not, not
in not in retail and certainly
not in e-commerce.
Like a really, really important
hug.
And one of the things that I'm
always talking about is that,
you know, I coined this term
like I call it bottom up trade
now that it's basically like a
merge of on trade and off trade
together where the brand
building actually happens.
When people are inclined to hear
a brand building story, they can
be sitting at your restaurant or
standing in front of your shelf
and there is a clerk explaining
to them what you know at guiding
them because maybe they have to
buy it for dinner, They have to
buy for a present.
And that doesn't really happen
in certain type of what I call
top down trade, which is more
like the bulk supermarkets and
also big restaurant on trade
chains where there's just the
waiter, waitress, you know,
taking the orders like gin and
Sony.
And then nobody's going to
explain to you all this Gene is
made with.
These botanicals, how do you see
this, the different interactions
between, I mean, you, you
mentioned already, you know the
label, for example, but does the
on trade give you the
experience, the feedback loop
which you then take into off
trade?
Or is it more of a circle off to
on to off?
What are the differences between
on and off in behavior that you
see on the guest and in choices
and in what they're looking for?
Yeah, that's a good question.
I think one insight that we do
know because it's really like as
much as you'd love to have.
Oh yeah.
So we own a restaurant, we own a
shop.
So we know what people want.
You know, customers, every
single person is unique, right?
So it's not like that simple.
And maybe that's just our
approach as well, because we
take the hospitality style of
service into retail.
So it's like everyone who walks
through the door, we treat them
as an individual.
And so, yeah, we're not so good
at pigeon hole.
And that's the kind of like what
people want necessarily because
we just do it bespoke every
time.
But one thing that we have
noticed, which is interesting is
like the price point of stuff.
And what we found is things that
work by the glass, that price
range in a restaurant that
translates to the premium end of
the off trade, if that makes
sense.
So the wines that we in our
portfolio that do really well by
the glass in, in our ours and in
other people's restaurants and
stuff, they're always the the
best retail bottles, if that
makes sense because.
OK.
So in a restaurant it's the kind
of entry point, but then in a
off trade venue it's the upsell
because of the price point
there.
If I understand correctly, you
mean the entries of the lowest
priced wine on a wine list.
That is what becomes the best
selling per bottle in the off
trade.
Did I get it right?
Yeah, exactly.
And I wouldn't say like the
lowest price, but it's just the
way our portfolio is.
So wines that are selling for
like, I think 8 lbs a glass,
they then retail like maybe 22
lbs a bottle.
That little intersection is
where the sort of magic happens
because I think people like, you
know, because they've seen it in
a restaurant as well.
And it's like, oh, cool, yeah, I
know that one.
I've tried it.
Buy it in the shop and how do
you choose?
Because this is a very
interesting thing.
For example, how do you choose
the ones that go by the glass?
You know, is it is the off trade
feedback, the is it like what
I'm expecting, let's say like,
and correct me if I'm wrong, is
that there's a bit of a feedback
loop, you know, that on trade
feeds into off trade and then
off trade feeds back into the on
trade.
And then you create the perfect
mix of things.
Yeah, yeah.
That's it.
And I think some, you're
absolutely right.
And that's something I think we
just take for granted.
You know, what our product range
is, is absolutely a result of
what people have been drinking
in our bars and restaurants over
the years.
And then now we're working with
other bars and restaurants.
That's just a hyper speed
feedback loop now because what
coincidentally or not it was our
best sellers is now the best
sellers in all of those places.
And actually now we're doing
like bigger volumes.
You can kind of see as well.
This is what it's our project
really for the next year is to
really look at the top ten, top
20 lines.
And actually it's starting to
resemble a wine list.
So you've got an easy drinking,
chillable Reds, a fresh
approachable white wine and
affordable orange wine,
sparkling wine.
And that has happened naturally.
But obviously because we're
writing wine lists for people
that it just sort of, it's all
come about organically.
That's so that's so interesting
because it's a it's always the,
I mean, when, when I take it
from a spirit's point of view,
you know, there's always the,
let's say the gin and tonic or
the cocktail.
And then you mentioned the brand
in the Negroni or, you know,
Sazerac or whatever that is.
You know, then in theory that
will inform the consumer and
then they may go and buy it
enough trade as a bottle because
it's the famous the liquid on
lips so that they call in the in
the industry.
And also you bring up lower
price points or let's say less
of a risk to buy because it's
cheaper to spend £8 than 22 lbs.
And then I may go and buy the
bottle because then I trust that
I know the bottle now.
And it's very interesting how
that works, you know, in wine as
well, because then you can have
that feedback loop because they
don't get the glass of wine in
your restaurant and then they go
and buy it elsewhere, but they
actually go and buy it in your
shop.
So, so it's, you know, you have
that immediate flow of
information and feedback and
it's great to see that.
Obviously it sounds you have it
in the back of your mind, so you
don't really articulate it, but
that's exactly what happens.
You take it for granted.
Totally.
And I think another little
secret weapon is because you're
looking after them in the
restaurant, showing them a good
time, everything tastes a little
bit better anyway.
It's like when you have a pina
colada on holiday, it always
tastes better.
It's the Guinness in Dublin
effects.
You've got experience in spirits
as well.
You were working with cocktails
and spirits as well.
That's my sort of original
background, was bartending and
working in some amazing bars in
the Manchester Melbourne, doing
competitions and stuff like
that.
So yeah, lots of experience in
the spirits trade.
What you would you say is the
biggest difference between wines
and spirits?
I think spirits like more just
openly commercial in the way
that they're marketing and
selling their product.
No shame to try and sell
spirits.
Whereas in wine there's a lot of
reliance on provenance and just
let the wine speak for
themselves.
You know, this is too pure of a
liquid to market, even though
there's budgets being thrown
around in the wine world, just
as there is in spirits.
But I think the way people
perceive it and talk about it,
certainly in the kind of like
low intervention side of things
as well, marketing is almost
like a dirty word there.
And yeah, that's something that
we do differently in the wine
industry.
It's like, yeah, we work with
these incredible kind of well
made, low intervention,
sometimes biodynamic organic
wines, but we're not dogmatic
about that.
And you know, we still recognize
that.
Yeah, you need to push and sell
them and get them in front of
people and get that liquid on
those lips.
That's all for today.
I hope you enjoy this episode.
If you can think of a couple of
people that you think would be
benefiting from listening to
this to this episode or watching
it on YouTube and Spotify,
please share it with them.
I will be very thankful.
Also, if you if you want to rate
the podcast, it helps people
find the show.
This episode was was a was a
fantastic conversation.
We, you know, we, we're going to
have a second part released
shortly in this part, you know,
like all these elements of how
to make brand building a
welcoming space for for
customers and consumers.
You know, the differences
between wine and and spirits
marketing and sales.
And also one of the topics that
are very dear to my heart is how
to deliver a premium experience,
but also make it affordable to
one end and also welcoming to
the masses so that you don't
have to only appeal to the elite
and to the top end and the the
top 1%, the portals of the
middle ground.
Now, obviously top Covey is is a
very high quality establishment
is not really like a middle
ground, but what I like is their
philosophy of wine for everyone
so that you know they can make
it.
They can make that bridge
between top end hospitality, a
top end retailer and regular
normal consumers and buyers that
want to get familiar with wines.
Come back for the next episode
and remember that brands are
built bottom up.