Six Cans and a Shrug
Scottsville Road · Bowling Green · Steakhouse · Visit Website ↗
Reviewed by the RagingWine Tasting Desk · July 12, 2026
RagingWine reviewed Logan's Roadhouse’s wine list and gave it The Lazy List — RagingWine’s Vibe-Check rating. How RagingWine reviews wine lists →
Wingman Metrics
The wine list at Logan's Roadhouse Bowling Green is exactly what you'd expect from a chain steakhouse that considers a bucket of peanuts on the table a personality. Six options, all available by the can or glass, no bottles listed — this is a wine program the way a vending machine is a restaurant.
There's no regional identity here, no attempt at curation, and no bottles to speak of. What you get is a tight roster of nationally distributed, grocery-tier labels: Graham + Fisk's Cabernet, Underwood Pinot Noir, Imagery Chardonnay, and La Vieille Ferme Rosé round out a list that leans entirely on brand recognition rather than any considered selection. To Logan's credit, all six pours exist — but this reads less like a wine program and more like someone's first draft that never got revised. If you're hoping to find anything from a specific region or a producer with a story, keep hoping.
All six wines are poured by the glass from 250ml cans, which at least keeps things consistent pour-to-pour. At $7–$12 a pop for what amounts to a third of a bottle, the math starts to sting a little — you're paying close to $25–$35 per bottle equivalent for labels you can grab off a Kroger shelf for $12. No rotation, no seasonal additions, no surprises.
La Vieille Ferme Rosé — $8
It's reliably drinkable, widely respected for its price tier, and at the lower end of the menu's range — as value goes here, it's the least painful option on the card.
Underwood Pinot Noir
Canned Pinot Noir gets eye-rolls, but Underwood from Oregon's Union Wine Co. is genuinely decent — light, fruit-forward, and better than it has any right to be in this context. Most people reaching for red here will grab the Cab, but this is the smarter move.
Graham + Fisk's Cabernet
At $12 per 250ml can you're paying a premium for a label that retails around $12–$14 for a full 750ml. The wine itself is perfectly adequate, but the markup here is doing the most heavy lifting on this entire list.
Imagery Chardonnay + Grilled Salmon
Imagery is a lightly oaked, approachable California Chardonnay — and against Logan's grilled salmon it holds its own without either overpowering the fish or disappearing into the background. Not a revelation, but it works.
❌ The Bottom Line
Logan's Roadhouse isn't here to impress you with wine, and it doesn't. Order a beer, grab a bourbon, or smuggle in something worth drinking — the wine list is an afterthought and it knows it.
Old Morgantown Road · Bowling Green · Mexican
Los Primos is a solid neighborhood Mexican spot, but the wine program is purely incidental — three glasses, no bottles, no story. Stick to the margaritas, which is almost certainly what the kitchen and bar were built around anyway.
Grocery Store
Fair
Basic Stemmed
Willing but Green
Set & Forget
Acceptable
Scottsville Road · Bowling Green · Japanese
Come to Yuki for the sushi, which by all accounts earns its local-staple status. Come for the wine only if you're keeping it simple — stick to the Stoneleigh or the Wollersheim Riesling and call it a night.
Grocery Store
Fair
Basic Stemmed
Rotating Cast
Set & Forget
Acceptable
Scottsville Road Corridor · Bowling Green · Bar / Steakhouse
Montana Grille Bar is a reliable pour in a city that isn't exactly overrun with serious wine programs — you won't find anything that surprises you, but you won't get burned either. If you're ordering a Wagyu steak, Jordan or Stag's Leap will carry the night just fine.
Crowd Pleasers
Steep
Basic Stemmed
Willing but Green
Set & Forget
Acceptable
Campbell Lane / Scottsville Road · Bowling Green · American / Casual
Cheddar's wine list is the definition of a chain going through the motions — grocery store labels, steep markups, and zero personality. Order a cocktail or a beer, enjoy your chicken tenders, and save the wine for somewhere that actually cares.
Grocery Store
Steep
Basic Stemmed
Rotating Cast
Set & Forget
Acceptable
Scottsville Road Corridor · Bowling Green · American / Casual
Rafferty's wine list is fine the same way a beige wall is fine — inoffensive, forgettable, and doing the bare minimum. Order the Ste. Michelle Riesling, enjoy your ribs, and save your wine ambitions for a different night.
Crowd Pleasers
Fair
Basic Stemmed
Willing but Green
Set & Forget
Acceptable
Chestnut Street / WKU Area · Bowling Green · Pizza / American
Come for the stone-baked pizza and the craft beer — Mellow Mushroom Bowling Green earns its stripes on both counts. The wine list is an afterthought with grocery-tier bottles at steep markups, so if you're committed to wine, hit Winesday and stick to the Prosecco split.
Grocery Store
Steep
Basic Stemmed
Willing but Green
Active Program
Acceptable
I-35 North · Georgetown · Steakhouse
Saltgrass Georgetown is not a wine destination — not even close — but it's one of the rare chain steakhouses where the wine program won't leave you feeling cheated. If you're here for the steak and want something decent in your glass at a fair price, you're covered.
Crowd Pleasers
Steal
Basic Stemmed
Willing but Green
Set & Forget
Acceptable
Wolf Ranch / I-35 Corridor · Georgetown · Steakhouse
LongHorn Georgetown is a perfectly fine place to eat a steak; it is not a place to drink wine. The pricing is fair enough that you won't feel robbed, but the list is so narrow and uninspired that you'd be better off asking what's on draft.
Grocery Store
Fair
Basic Stemmed
Rotating Cast
Set & Forget
Acceptable
Ogden Canyon Base / East Ogden · Ogden · Steakhouse
Timbermine earns its reputation as a reliable Ogden institution on the strength of its food and atmosphere — the wine list is just along for the ride. Come for the prime rib, order something red and Californian, and don't overthink it.
Plays It Safe
Steep
Basic Stemmed
Willing but Green
Set & Forget
Acceptable
One wine list review, one adventure pick, one quick tip, and a personal note. Every week. Under 500 words.