As enthusiasts of both wine and travel will agree, learning about a region’s wine culture significantly enriches the experience of a destination. Enology and culinary exploration allow curious travelers to delve into the essence of a place. By tasting different wines and learning the different terroirs and methods of production while on wine voyages, we expand our knowledge of a destination’s geography, culinary customs and even its history. Stories around wine weave a vibrant tapestry of a region’s culinary heritage. A Silversea wine guide is a terrific place to start.

When it comes to fermented grapes, all Silversea guests have an unprecedented opportunity to sample a wide variety of bottles. “Luxury is embodied not just by quality but by choice,” states Silversea’s Wine Ambassador Lawrence d’Almeida. With that in mind, he relies on his many years of expertise to curate Silversea’s collection of approximately 160 different wines and always adds local selections when relevant to visited destinations.

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Darwin de Belen, Silversea’s Head Sommelier on Silver Explorer, showcases a sample of Silversea’s wine offering./Lucia Griggi

Choosing bottles from the complimentary selection

With roughly 70 different labels, Silversea’s complimentary selection is lauded by wine experts as perhaps the largest and broadest aboard any cruise ship. “It’s available to all guests at all times⁠ — there’s no need to open a wallet or sign a receipt,” d’Almeida explains. “Since Silversea really does sail all seas, I aim to have the 11 most important wine-producing countries represented on the complimentary selection.” To complement the world’s most iconic wines, d’Almeida includes many unsung heroes and characterful favorites in the Silversea wine program. Here are a few of his favorite selections in an introductory wine guide:

1. Greystone Cellars California Petite Sirah

From the United States, Greystone Cellars makes the cut with the lesser-known red grape Petite Sirah, which produces a wine bursting with fruit and characterized by structure and perfect balance. “This spontaneous crossing of two native grapes in France made its way to California to become a hidden gem,” he says. “As an under-appreciated California grape, it’s hidden from view amid the ocean of Cabernet Sauvignon. It’s so named because its leaves resemble those of the Syrah grape, only smaller.”

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Lawrence d’Almeida — Silversea’s Wine Ambassador — describes Greystone Cellars California Petite Sirah as a “hidden gem”./Lucia Griggi

2. Brown Brothers 18EN Tasmania Sauvignon Blanc

Recognizing the popularity of Sauvignon Blanc, d’Almeida includes a label from Australia, alongside ubiquitous New Zealand. “Australia has, by necessity, always made warm-climate wines, producing big, alcoholic reds and bold, structured whites.” Until recently, Australia’s wine lovers most often turned to the island nation for variety in the way of elegant, light-structured cool-climate wines. “Now the new frontier is Tasmania, an enchanted island which is quickly becoming Australia’s answer to its Kiwi neighbor,” says d’Almeida. “This crisp Sauvignon Blanc is reminiscent of, but not identical to, the famed and ubiquitous Marlborough variety.”

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Produced in Tasmania, Brown Brothers’ 1889 is a crisp Sauvignon Blanc./Lucia Griggi

3. Vallegre Douro Red Reserva

Also, at the forefront of trends, there’s the Vallegre Reserva. This dry red table wine hails from Portugal’s Douro Valley, which is arguably the world’s most spectacular vineyard landscape and where Port has been made for centuries. “The wines are made from blends of innumerable grape varieties, with officially 82 ‘permitted’ grape varieties,” explains d’Almeida. “Today, as Port consumption has greatly declined along with all sweet wines generally, those same grapes produce more dry whites and reds which are taking the wine world by storm.”

4. Simon Komjanc DOC San Floriano del Collio Friulano

As an homage to the cruise line’s heritage, d’Almeida highlights Italian wines in particular. “Italy makes wine with a greater variety of grapes than any other country by far, and surprisingly makes as many different white as red wines,” he says. “This Friulano, a grape native to Italy’s far Northeast, represents the extraordinary wealth of native Italian wine grapes.”

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Lawrence d’Almeida highlights Italian wines in particular, as a nod to Silversea’s Italian heritage./Lucia Griggi

Exploring the Connoisseur List’s vast selection of icon wines

One could drink solely from the Complimentary Program and disembark from a Silversea cruise content. Guests looking to elevate their experience with a deep dive into icon wines, however, should explore the Connoisseur List. The Wine Ambassador ensures the number of different wines, ranging from the famed châteaux of Bordeaux to the best of Napa Valley, remains unusually high as evidenced by his selections below.

1. Vega Sicilia Unico 2005

Guests with a penchant for finer tastes will frequently order structured, age-worthy reds. In Spain’s famous Ribera del Duero, known for big, structured Tempranillo-based reds, d’Almeida highlights Vega Sicilia. “Ask any wine expert or serious connoisseur which the best wine of Spain would be, and in unison, the answer would be: Vega Sicilia Unico,” d’Almeida proclaims. “Vega is the oldest fine red producer and stands out for extraordinary attention to detail.” As evidence: the unparalleled Unico 2005, a brawny Tempranillo-based red built for the cellar. The Wine Ambassador’s reverence for its quality is unwavering: “Reds don’t come much better than this anywhere on the planet,” he states.

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On Silversea’s Connoisseur List, Vega Sicilia Unico is among the most celebrated wines in Spain./Lucia Griggi

2. J. Prieur Clos de Vougeot 2012

But d’Almeida doesn’t serve only power and tannin. The whites, particularly the exquisite Burgundies, represent the synergy of vintage and producer. “Burgundy is the winemaker’s El Dorado, and no prestigious wine list is without a selection of the region’s exquisite Chardonnays and Pinot Noirs,” he explains. Clos de Vougeot, the largest single vineyard with a walled enclosure of 125 acres (50 hectares) and more than 80 owners, is legendary “The venerable house of Jacques Prieur is one of its most renowned producers,” d’Almeida declares.

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Silver Explorer’s Head Sommelier presents a bottle of Chateau d’Yquem from 2005./Lucia Griggi

3. Chateau d’Yquem Grand Cru 2006 (0,375l)

No list of the world’s greats could eschew Sauternes house Chateau d’Yquem. The Grand Cru 2006 is a liquid jewel of dried apricot, honey and spiced nuts. “Like other luminaries before and after him, Thomas Jefferson got it right: Château d’Yquem is the greatest sweet wine in the world,” states d’Almeida. “Laboriously made with botrytis fungus, the ‘noble rot’ that nature provides, it has been called not wine but…nectar.”

4. Jermann Vintage Tunina 2015

With another selection from Friuli, guests can taste Vintage Tunina 2015 by Jermann, one of the region’s best producers. “The Friuli region of Italy has long been considered the region that is producing Italy’s greatest white wines,” says d’Almeida. Among these, one of the greatest is considered producer Jermann’s ‘Vintage Tunina,’ a blend of local and international grapes that produces a wine of supreme complexity and balance, which ages exceptionally well, as only great wines can.”

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Silversea’s wine program offers guests the luxury of choice./Lucia Griggi

Has this Silversea wine guide inspired you? Experience these wines and other epicurean delights as part of the S.A.L.T. (Sea Land and Taste) program.