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Weeknight wines: 5 top bottles for lazy summer nights


Read time 4 Mins

Posted 04 Dec 2025

By
Lulu Morris


Pouring a bottle of white wine while prepping a meal in the kitchen

 Here’s what to sip as the year comes to a close.

There’s a stretch of time from office shutdown to New Year’s where time ceases to exist. We all wander around baffled by what day it is, what date it might be, and whether the Christmas ham is still safe to throw on the barbie (we decide it is, drench it in sauce and move on). We call this period the “time’s a construct” window. You know, like when Matthew McConaughey floated into the black hole in Interstellar. Days, nights, weekends – everything blends into one glorious amorphous blob. Cooking? Maybe. KFC buckets? Probably. Wine? Definitely.

Decisions become easier, work vanishes and responsibility takes a well-earned nap. And to make things even smoother, we’ve lined up some fab wines to sip on during those “weeknights” that technically no longer exist. So sit back, settle in and enjoy the black hole.

akridge Ovata Chardonnay Pinot Noir

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1. Oakridge Ovata Chardonnay Pinot Noir

You all know how much we love Ovata. It is, excuse the millennialism, the bomb-diggity. We’ve been singing its praises forever and you lot playing at home have backed us up with rave reviews. It’s the snap, crackle and pop of our wine line-up this month, and we truly cannot recommend it highly enough. Crunchy apple notes, hints of stone fruit, fresh red berry aromas… need we say more? And yes, it’s going to pair beautifully with a big ol’ Boxing Day KFC bucket. Mark our words. Report back.

$25.99 Each

2. Yering Station Little Yering Pinot Noir

Okay, we may have inflated the truth earlier. Not every night in the Dead Zone is takeaway night. Some nights are reserved for hovering over the barbecue. You know the drill: sausages. Gourmet, hot dog, or plain Woolies – it’s tradition. Beer usually leads the dance on sausage-sanger night, but Yering Station Little Yering Pinot Noir is also a brilliant pairing. Bright red in the glass, with intense red cherry and raspberry fruit flavours, this is perfumed, ethereal and just the right kind of juxtaposition for a back-to-basics sausage sandwich. And it’s less than $20 a bottle. Did we mention that?
$17.95 each
Yering Station Little Yering Pinot Noir

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Boatshed Bay Sauvignon Blanc

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3. Boatshed Bay Sauvignon Blanc

Savvy b for a savvy b. Kidding! But seriously, sometimes a Marlborough white – bursting with passionfruit and gooseberry aromas, refreshing citrus and delicate stone fruit – is exactly what a balmy summer night demands. This one goes exceptionally well with your fish and chips. Fruity enough to slice through the fried, fatty bits, but still elegant and subtle enough to shine with prawn cutlets. Serve it perfectly chilled and thank us later.
$16.99 each

4. Chapel Hill The Parson Cabernet Sauvignon

Travelling back to your hometown comes with upsides and downsides. Downsides? Well, you already know. Upsides? There’s always that one dingy burger joint that still has the smarts to serve a proper burger with the lot. We’re talking about beetroot, pineapple, bacon, egg – the whole shebang. Now imagine that alongside a glass of Chapel Hill The Parson Cabernet Sauvignon. Vibrant, with licorice and mulberry aromas, this full-bodied beauty does absolute wonders with the fattiness of a “lot” burger. Trust us. And just like that suburban burger that has everything thrown in, it’s also a total steal.

$16.99 each
Chapel Hill The Parson Cabernet Sauvignon

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De Bortoli King Valley Prosecco

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5. De Bortoli King Valley Prosecco

Did we hear “one more bubbly”? No? Well, we’re doing it anyway. De Bortoli King Valley Prosecco is a crisp, perky, delicious drop that absolutely hits the mark. It’s everything a prosecco should be – not too sweet or too dry. We’re obsessed. And as for that leftover Christmas ham? The one that never gets fully finished? Fry it up for an egg-and-ham roll and this prosecco will pair with it beautifully. Brunch, baby. No one’s getting up before 11am anyway. Mimosa it, Bellini it, or sip it on its own – this bottle belongs at your late-morning fry-up.

Member Offer
$13 per bottle Non-Member: $15.99 each
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