List of 20 Good Red Wines for $15 or Less.
By mkott
I wrote a hub earlier about good cheap California wine. Since writing that article, friends and family have bombarded me with their favorite inexpensive wines. Since I am a red wine drinker and rarely venture into white wines I decided to write about the reds. I am going to venture out of the state of California; but not completely to give you a list worthy of your time spent reading this.
I read an article on some website where this guy wrote that he found nothing worth drinking in the $10 to $15 range. I thought this guy must have really bad luck in choosing a good inexpensive wine. I know there is some out there that is pretty good. I know a bad wine when I taste it because of the fact I've had a number of years of practice. Frankly I do not drink much of anything else when I do drink. I have to admit I may have the occasional Margarita with my Mexican food.
So let's delve into the world; list of good red wine for $15 or less.
The List of Cheap But Good Red Wine.
I am not going to get all fancy and tell you about the wine. I am not very good at it and can really only tell you if it was aged in oak, with a hint of cherries. Some people are very good at it and get really into it. Lets be real, we just want to know of some good inexpensive wine.
I am shooting for a list of 20 and will try not to repeat some wines that I wrote about earlier. Here it goes.
- Fat Bastard, Shiraz - French.
- Big House Red - California, Central Coast.
- Hardy's, Oomoo Shiraz - Australia.
- Bonny Doon, Cardinal Zin - California, Central Coast.
- Taurino Salice, Salentino - Italy.
- Primarius, Pinot Noir - Oregon.
- Castle Rock - Sonoma County Syrah - Calfornia.
- Ravenswood, Lodi Zinfandel - California. Lodi has the oldest Zinfandel vines in California.
- Oak Mountain, For Pete's Sake - Temecula California. This wine is over $15 unless you are a club member.
- Terrazas de los Andes Reserva, Malbec - Argentina.
- SonOfABitch, Pinot Noir - Canada.
- Panilonco, Merlor/Malbec - Chile.
- Red Truck, Red - California
- Ducks Pond, Cabernet or their Pinot Noir - Oregon.
- Lindeman Bin 50, Shiraz - Australia.
- Bulls Blood, any of their reds - Hungary.
- Seven Oaks, Cabernet - California.
- Coyote Ridge, Pinot Noir - Oregon.
- Spellbound, Petite Syrah - Lodi, California.
- Dry Creek, Zinfandel Heritage - Sonoma, California.
Last Thoughts
Now I know I will here you forgot this wine or that wine. Let's face it: there are many wines out there that can be enjoyed for under $15. If you go up to $20 for a bottle your selection, of course increases. I know that I will be in shopping for wine and I will think to myself, there is one I forgot.
If you are thinking of buying one of these lovely wines off this list for a friend, be careful. There are wine snobs out there; you know who I am talking about. The person that stands there and tells you he/she just bought this exquisite wine that "only" cost $150. Now if your friend thinks drinking jug wine, or wine out of a box is the bomb, you give them one of these and they will be in heaven. They may also think that you just spent a pretty penny on them and will think you are the next best thing since... a good bottle of wine.
Check out this article "Simple Tips for Purchasing Wine as Gifts".
Comments
I'm bookmarking this page for future reference. Looking for affordable and enjoyable wines can involve a lot of trial and error. I'm always glad to start with recommendations first.
Thanks for writing this. Many people think you have to go out and spend hundreds of dollars on a bottle wine whether it red or white. I live in one of Canada's Great wine regions. We go wine tasting and attend wine festival up here. We can buy Award winning wines for well under $15.00 when we visit the wineries. But if your in a area that doesn't have a winery and your stumped always go for an Australian Red. Shiraz is great because it's a nice medium body. I just haven't found a Zinfandel red or white theat I enjoy. I find they taste like window washer fluid. But if you stick to names like Merlot, Shiraz, Cabernet Sauvignon, you can't really go wrong. I've had some expensive red wines from France that I didn't care for either. If you'd rather take a white wine try a Reisling...it's nice and light tasting.
I make my own wine, but thank you for the tips. I will rate up
This is my kind of hub. I enjoy giving wine as gifts but sometimes my budget limits what I can buy. I don't want to give another Australian animal wine so I'll definitely be referring to your list.




funky23 14 months ago
is that neat ?