Boutari Greek wine

Role: CD/copywriter

How do you inspire trial of a wine nobody has heard of? You enlist the help of the wine god, of course, and let him deputize fellow Boutari drinkers to carry on in his stead.

Dionysus spotted flaunting her snappy Moschofilero.

What a goddess wants, a goddess gets. For a dinner party or a party of one, she requires the attention of a Boutari Moschofilero. Fragrant, dry, and romantic, even mere mortals will recognize a taste of the divine.

 

Dionysus spotted cavorting with a naughty Naoussa, fresh Robola, and a luscious Savatiano.

Nothing escapes the attention of the wine god. Not beautiful women, not heaping platters and certainly not cellars brimming with Boutari wine. A sip here, a glass there, and suddenly, even the most mortal of men realize why this is the fruit of the gods.

 

Dionysus spotted admiring a spicy Naoussa.

Some days, simple pleasures just won’t do. When Greeks seek complexity, they pour Boutari Naoussa. A spicy nectar adept at tempting and teasing in ways simpler wines could never manage. A happy reward for the sophisticated palate—mortal or god.

 

Dionysus spotted flirting with a romantic Kallisti.

Greeks believe you need only 3 ingredients for the good life. Good food, good friends, and good wine. Uncorking a bottle of Kallisti Santorini will assuredly improve your food. And perhaps, even your friends.