Same. Switch a lot.
@storrsroars overstates my current wine knowledge, which has gone stale from what it was when I was reading books on winemaking and talking to winemakers for hours in CA. But I do tend to soak things up and go all in. When I got into craft beer the second time, I was drinking everything that came out and learning about brewing, especially what made the fledgling NE IPA style possible. But I gave up. Too many breweries and beers, too many calories. Got into bourbon, then Scotch, then rum, then brandy...dabbled in Mezcal. And as before read books, talked to distillers and experts, and tried everything I could. I was on the team that chose
this single barrel Cognac and
this one last year. Now I've largely given up writing reviews on spirits and trading samples etc. I do recommend Fine Drams though, great place to get Scotch you can't get otherwise, usually at lower prices than here even after shipping costs. Jonas does a terrific job.
Cider has been fun because I haven't done what I did with wine, beer and spirits. I just drink it and some are good and some are meh. The Normandy ciders were great. We have lots of good craft cider in the Northeast. My favorite so far is
Artifact. Several good ones in Vermont. Ace makes a very good pear cider.
@8893 one of the better Normandy style ciders I've had in the U.S. was from
Eden in Vermont.
On the wine front, as
@ColchVEGAS said, I'm just looking for good wine at a good price. That used to be incredibly easy to find, and now it takes some effort. I think that's where we can help each other here. To that end, I highly recommend this
super cheap California Pinot Grigio. I grabbed it for $8 at BJs and I think we've bought a case since then. Has a real key lime and flint flavor profile that is just pleasant. Prefer it to the bland Italian PGs I've had.