Browsable party concepts, each with a built-in vote and just enough effort to start a
conversation. Filter by who's coming, group size, season, and the kind of night you want.
Bring a wrapped bottle (wine or spirit) with a one-line clue taped to it. The table guesses region or varietal before each reveal. Closest guess wins; the host keeps a scorecard. A gentle, delicious humbling.
AnyoneMedium groupAny seasonLow effort
Wine & Tasting
Old World vs New World
A comparative pour disguised as a party. Each guest brings two bottles of the same grape — one European, one not — and the table tastes them head to head, blind. Vote for the wine you’d actually buy. The wine-nerd entry point.
AnyoneMedium groupAny seasonMedium effort
Wine & Tasting
Two Truths Tasting
Pour blind, and with each wine the host reads two true facts and one lie about it. The table votes on the lie before the reveal. A featherweight tasting game — just enough structure to get people guessing and arguing, none of the homework.
AnyoneMedium groupAny seasonLow effort
Wine & Tasting
Blind Consumption Night
A blind tasting that refuses to be precious. Bag everything — Coke vs Pepsi, name-brand vs store-brand Oreos, cheap vs expensive vodka, three chocolates, a flight of beers. People love discovering they’re wrong, and they almost always are. Bracket it for a tournament if you want a winner.
AnyoneMedium groupAny seasonLow effort
Wine & Tasting
House Pour Olympics
A recurring blind bracket for everyday wine. Each guest brings one bottle under a set price; the table tastes them head to head, blind, and brackets them to a single champion. The winner’s bottle becomes the house pour until someone dethrones it next month. A title to defend is a reason to come back.
AnyoneMedium groupAny seasonMedium effort
Wine & Tasting
Can You Taste the Difference?
A tasting that interrogates the rituals. Serve the same wine decanted vs not, cellar-temp vs warm, crystal vs jelly jar — and let the table decide blind what’s real and what’s theology. Decanting, temperature, and glassware are testable, not sacred. The lesson is in the gap between what people swear they taste and what they actually can.
AnyoneMedium groupAny seasonMedium effort
A bespoke dinner-party concierge. Vote with conviction; bring something defensible.Ideas · Playbook