
Annilee Newton
is a Houston-based writer and high school English teacher. For the last decade, Annilee has been writing about food and memory. Wine Tasting is an essay from her nonfiction manuscript The Sense of Taste.
Annilee has an MFA in Creative Writing from Lesley University. She drinks Oregon pinot noir with steak, prosecco with pad thai, and has been known to complain about the over-the-top oakiness of California chardonnay to anyone who will listen. You can learn more about her work at www.annileenewton.com.
Memoir
Wine Tasting
written by Annilee Newton
Annilee Newton answered a Craigslist job post with a photo of herself drinking wine — a bold move that will eventually lead to her becoming a professional wine taster. This amusing memoir takes us along on Annilee’s journey to learn the intricate art of wine tasting. We travel with her to Mississippi, France, and Texas. We learn that place affects the taste of wine—both the place where the wine is made and where the wine is drunk. And we also learn that the secret to mastering wine tasting is… surprisingly… in learning to smell.
Read by Rebekah Nemethy
Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Android | Stitcher | Email

Q&A with Annilee
Tell us about your story...
Wine Tasting tells the story of how I fell into a world where wine labels are social indicators and the ability to differentiate subtle tastes puts you at the top of a hierarchy. Eventually, I learned how to navigate through the hypocrisy to discover authenticity and the reasons why a person would try to turn their memories into flavors.
What was the inspiration for this story?
The inspiration for this essay came from my experience working in an upscale wine bar in Houston, Texas. To me, it feels like a classic example of truth being stranger than fiction.
What have you recently read that you loved?
“Lately, I’ve been on a young adult kick. I recently read and loved Where the World Ends by Geraldine McCaughrean and Coram Boy by Jamila Gavin. Both novels are historical fiction and they simultaneously blew me away and taught me about the world. I also recently read Sherri L. Smith’s Orleans. Her dystopian reimaging of the Gulf Coast is horrifyingly relevant to our political and pandemic reality these days.”
What do you like to do when you’re not writing?
I teach! High school English and French. I also have been playing A LOT of boardgames with my husband. Hiking, camping, traveling, knitting sweaters full of holes, shamelessly doing unimpressive yoga in public parks.
Someday I want to...
Go on one of those very, very long walks. Like the Camino de Santiago, or the Appalachian Trail, or along the ruins of Hadrian’s Wall.

If You Enjoyed This Episode…
give these a listen!
Lightning Flowers
Sarah K. Lenz Sarah K. Lenz’s nonfiction has appeared in numerous liteary journals. Three of her essays have been named Notable in Best American Essays, and she received the New Letters Readers’ award in nonfiction. Sarah holds an MFA in creative nonfiction from Georgia College in Milledgeville, where her claim to fame is that she once held Flannery O’ Connor’s bra while working as a...
Handling Shit and Finding Love
Betina Entzminger is a Southern-born writer and English professor currently living and working in Pennsylvania. A quadruple divorcee and mother of two teenagers, Entzminger holds a Ph.D. in English from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She is the author of the recent memoir, The Beak in the Heart: True Tales of Misfit Southern Women, published by Rivercliff Books & Media. Her...
The Darker Side of a Night with Hunter Thompson
Roberto LoiedermanDuring the Vietnam War I worked as a deckhand on ships that delivered napalm and other ammo to Southeast Asia. On my first vessel, as we approached Vietnam, my shipmates looked longingly toward the green coastline, rotten ready to get ashore after three tough weeks at sea. Thinking I was being clever, I grabbed a piece of chalk and wrote something on the messroom blackboard. It...