
I say high-class due to the design and presentation of it, it’s beautiful and in-step with the latest ideas about app and web page design. It presents itself as a high-class app focused on rating what you drink then suggesting what to drink. Distillerĭistiller ( iOS/ Android/ Web) is the best whiskey/bourbon app I could track down and I’ve been quite happy with it. From there it moves on to allowing you to rate the wine then sharing that rating on the social network of your choice. Vivino provides a great wealth of information including food pairings. The results focus on how much it should cost, so you know if you’re overpaying, and what to expect out of the wine. Once you get to your wine the app shines. Luckily there is also a text-based search, but it is definitely not the way they want you to do things. If Vivino matches your photo it matches really well, but most of the time it fails on the first photo and I have to take another. A number of apps have tried this as an approach to searching for things and I find it rarely works well. The big downside is that it wants you to take a photo of the bottle to search for it. I think it succeeded well in those endeavors and I remain a user of it. When I began my adventure into wine Vivino ( iOS/ Android/ Web) was the most discussed app for learning about, and rating, wines. In my endless urge for capturing data to help me remember things, combined with having that data available in my pocket, I present the best apps I’ve found for both whiskey and wine! What else has changed is that I’ve gone from swearing off wine and rarely drinking spirits to enjoying both more often and becoming a more well-rounded imbiber. A few other beer apps have come, and gone, yet Untappd has remained supreme. Well, Untappd has become the dominant force in the beer app universe. Not too much has changed in the world of beer apps since then. Before any new readers ask when Round 1 was it was over 2 years ago, so you didn’t miss anything recent.
