Dry Wines

416 products

Babylonstoren Viognier 2023 White Wine
Regular price £15.90
Babylonstoren Viognier 2024
Kangarilla Road Montepulciano
Swift Albariño
Regular price £18.89
Swift Albariño 2024
Handpicked Regional Selections Chardonnay
Handpicked Méthode Traditionnelle
Joseph Mellot La Gravelière Sancerre
Exton Park Vineyard RB|23 Reserve Blend Rosé NV
Casa Ferreirinha Callabriga Douro
Tihom THM Rosado
Regular price £14.57
Tihom THM Rosado 2024
Tihom THM Blanco 2023
Regular price £17.24
Tihom THM Blanco 2023
Tihom THM Crianza
Regular price £30.95
Tihom THM Crianza Magnum 2023
Tihom Tinto 2019
Regular price £23.41
Tihom Tinto 2019
Tihom Blanco
Regular price £25.17
Tihom Blanco 2020
Maçanita Tinto
Regular price £22.50
Maçanita Tinto 2023
Olim Bauda Le Rocchette Barbera d'Asti Superiore
Guiberteau Les Moulins Saumur Blanc 2024
Alain Jaume Domaine Grand Veneur Côtes Du Rhône Blanc 2024
Valdespino Single Vineyard Tío Diego Amontillado Dry Sherry
Valdespino Deliciosa Manzanilla N.V.
Quinta dos Carvalhais Dão Colheita Tinto
Château Patache d'Aux Médoc 2016 Red Wine
Azevdo Alvarinho
Cascina Adelaide Barolo
Regular price £42.59
Cascina Adelaide Barolo 2020
Les Adages Maison Chanzy Bourgogne Pinot Noir

Dry Wines

Givino stocks dry wines across multiple styles, regions, and grape varieties, representing wines where fermentation converts grape sugars into alcohol with minimal residual sweetness remaining. Our dry wine selection includes both white and red expressions that demonstrate how complete fermentation creates wines with structure, acidity, and food-friendly characteristics. These wines answer the question " What's a dry wine” through examples that show how different grape varieties and winemaking techniques produce dry expressions with varying levels of tannins, acidity, and flavor concentration.

Understanding Dry Wine Production

Dry wine results when yeast ferments grape sugars into alcohol until little to no residual sugar remains, typically measuring less than 4 grams per liter. This fermentation process creates wines with clean finishes and allows other characteristics like acidity, tannins, and mineral content to show clearly. The wine dry classification depends on fermentation completion rather than grape variety, meaning both light and full-bodied wines can achieve dryness. Understanding this process helps explain why very dry wine expressions often pair well with food, as the lack of sweetness allows wine structure to complement rather than compete with diverse flavors.

Dry White Wine Characteristics

White dry wines in our collection demonstrate how different grape varieties express dryness through varying acidity levels, mineral content, and aromatic profiles. Sauvignon Blanc produces a very dry wine with high acidity and herbaceous character that works particularly well with seafood and goat cheese. Chardonnay creates dry expressions ranging from mineral-driven styles with subtle oak to richer versions with more texture while maintaining dryness. Albariño and other coastal varieties produce dry whites with salinity and crisp acidity that complement shellfish and light Mediterranean dishes.

  • High-acid dry whites - Sauvignon Blanc, Albariño, and Riesling with crisp, food-friendly structure
  • Mineral-driven expressions - Chablis-style Chardonnay and Loire Valley whites showing terroir
  • Textured dry whites - Chardonnay and white Rioja with complexity from oak or lees aging
  • Aromatic dry styles - Gewürztraminer and Viognier with intensity but complete dryness

Dry Red Wine Structure

Red dry wines rely on tannin structure and acidity rather than sweetness for complexity and aging potential. Cabernet Sauvignon produces structured, very dry wine with firm tannins that soften with age, creating wines suitable for rich meat dishes and aged cheeses. Tempranillo and Sangiovese demonstrate how Mediterranean varieties create dry reds with balanced acidity and moderate tannins that work well with diverse cuisines. Pinot Noir shows how lighter-bodied varieties can achieve dryness while maintaining elegance and food compatibility.

Dry vs Sweet Wine Comparison

The distinction between dry and sweet wine depends primarily on residual sugar levels after fermentation completion. Dry wines contain minimal residual sugar, allowing other wine components like acidity, tannins, and mineral content to dominate the flavor profile. This creates wines that enhance food rather than competing with it through sweetness. Sweet wines retain higher sugar levels through various production methods, creating different pairing opportunities and serving occasions. Understanding this difference helps explain why dry wines often serve as better dinner companions.

Food Pairing with Dry Wines

Dry wine structure makes these expressions particularly suitable for food pairing across diverse cuisines. The lack of sweetness allows wine acidity to cut through rich foods while tannins in red wines complement protein and fat content. White dry wines work especially well with seafood, poultry, and dishes with acidic components like tomatoes or citrus. Red dry wines pair naturally with grilled meats, aged cheeses, and dishes with herbs and earthy flavors.

Regional Approaches to Dry Wine

Different wine regions approach dryness through varying techniques and grape varieties suited to their climates. European regions traditionally produce dry wine styles that emphasize terroir expression and food compatibility. New World regions create dry wines that often showcase fruit intensity while maintaining structure. These regional differences create diversity within our dry wine collection, offering various expressions of how complete fermentation and appropriate winemaking create satisfying dry wines that demonstrate both varietal character and regional identity.

Our collection represents this diversity through dry wines from multiple regions and varieties, showing how different approaches to fermentation and winemaking create wines with structure, complexity, and food-friendly characteristics. Whether seeking crisp white wines or structured reds, our selection demonstrates the range and quality available within contemporary dry wine production from producers who understand how to create balanced, complete wines without residual sweetness.