It’s an interesting time to be in the wine business. On the supply side Europe’s economy is sluggish, geopolitics are a mess, and for the poor vignerons each year seems to bring a new combination of challenges. Weather has been the hot topic among farmers for as long as farming has existed, with the same relevance to winemakers today as to citizens of the Fertile Crescent 12,000 years ago. It’s hard to make a living when two thirds of your crop disappears in a chilly 48 hour stretch, and we empathize with our French friends who spent nights this spring literally burning the midnight oil in their vines. On the demand side, things are hardly clearer. Changing demographics and health trends have shifted the playing field. With 1 in 8 US adults on a GLP-1, and 1 in 3 wearing a fitness/sleep tracker, there’s just less drinking than even a few years ago. Domestic winemakers are in crisis, and many small wineries are pulling their vines or closing up shop. Of course a healthier populace is cause for celebration. We think wine has a place in a healthy lifestyle, as it has for millennia. Our customers often talk about a shift to “fewer bottles, but better ones,” and we see the same pattern in our own consumption. If you’re pulling half as many corks as you used to, better make them count. As anyone who has paused for January or Lent will tell you, that first sip of wine back is special – it means something. Which is, of course, the point. But to us the best thing that wine provides is the necessity of sharing. A bottle of wine fits most perfectly on a table filled with food and laughter and friends. Choosing and sharing a bottle from your cellar is an act of generous expression. It’s a way to tell a story – about yourself, and about a small family craftsman on the other side of an ocean. A healthy life is one that’s shared with others, and to us, a meaningful bottle of wine is one of life’s finest companions. May Futures offers a lot of Burgundy: — 4 of 8 producers and 75% of the wines. From Couvent we’re delighted to offer a grab bag of back-vintage Côte de Nuits reds, ranging from Bourgogne to Grand Cru. In Chassagne-Montrachet, we visit Thomas Morey, an exacting and meticulous winemaker crafting white Burgundies of extraordinary clarity and class. As usual there is great value to be found in Burgundy’s southern half: Gautier Desvignes’s soaring, fine-grained 2024 Givrys, and Sebastien Giroux’s astonishingly well priced Maconnais whites. (Seriously – we had to check ourselves several times to confirm the pricing on these wasn’t a typo.) Outside Burgundy we visit Dumien-Serette for Northern Rhône Syrah from Cornas, and Goubert for rich, delicious, organic Southern Rhône reds. We finish the lineup with a vibrant dry Muscadet from the mouth of the Loire Valley, and our crowd-favorite user-friendly Champagnes from Coutier in Ambonnay. Please submit orders by Sunday May 31 using the order form linked below. We expect these wines to arrive in July; shipping and PA pickup orders will be held until the fall. 
























