Arista Wine Cellars
320 5th Avenue South
Edmonds, WA 98020 [MAP]
425-771-7009 or
1-866-430-WINE (9463)
E-MAIL
 

Events 
 

 Italian Winery Fontanfredda from Piedmonte. Wine Tasting Saturday Jan. 28th, 1 - 4:30pm

22-Jan-2012 We will be featuring the wines of Fontanafredda from Piedmonte, Italy. Come in and taste Barolo Serralunga, Barbera, &am..Read More...

 Hess Family Wineries Wine Tasting Saturday Feb. 4th, 1 - 4:30pm

31-Jan-2012 We'll be tasting wines from Hess Family Wineries, including Hess Estate in Napa, CA, Peter Lehman from the Barossa i..Read More...

 Red Wine & Chocolate Tasting Event with Nama's Candy ~ Fri. Feb. 10th 5-7pm

05-Feb-2012 Join Nama's Candy at Arista Wine Cellars for our Fourth Annual Red Wine & Chocolate Tasting. Friday Night Februa..Read More...

 Vina Ventisquero from Chile Feb. 11th 1 - 4:30pm.

06-Feb-2012 Welcome Vina Ventisquero from Chile into the Seattle market. We recently tasted these wines with North & South Ameri..Read More...



Open Every Day:
Sunday 12pm - 5pm
Mon - Fri 10am - 7pm
Thursday 10am - 8pm
Saturday 10am - 5pm

Gifts & Accessories...

Featured Items:

Vinturi Wine Aerator

Vinturi Wine Aerator

Simply hold vinturi over a glass and pour wine through. Vinturi draws in and mixes the proper amount of air for the right amount of time, allowing your wine to breathe instantly. You'll notice a better bouquet, enhanced flavors and smoother finish.

It's that fast. It's that easy.


Riedel Glassware

Professor Claus J. Riedel was the first designer to recognize that the bouquet, taste, balance and finish of wines are affected by the shape of the glass from which they are drunk.

Fifty years ago he began his pioneering work to create stemware that would match and complement different wines and spirits. In the late 1950s, Riedel started to produce glasses which at that time were a design revolution. Thin-blown, unadorned, reducing the design to its essence: Bowl, stem, base.

Working with experienced tasters, Riedel discovered that wine enjoyed from his glasses showed more depth and better balance than when served in other glasses. Claus J. Riedel laid the groundwork for stemware which was functional as well as beautiful, and made according to the Bauhaus design principle: form follows function.