Green Bay's Best Steakhouse Wine List, Full Stop
Downtown · Green Bay · Upscale Steakhouse · Visit Website ↗
Reviewed by the RagingWine Tasting Desk · July 8, 2026
RagingWine reviewed Republic Chophouse’s wine list and gave it The Reliable — RagingWine’s Vibe-Check rating. How RagingWine reviews wine lists →
Wingman Metrics
The list lands exactly how you'd expect from a serious downtown chophouse — California heavy, classic labels, no real surprises. But for Green Bay, this is the big leagues. You're not fighting through a grocery store tier-off; you're actually choosing between Jordan and Duckhorn, which is a win.
California dominates here, with Napa and Sonoma taking up most of the real estate — Cakebread Chardonnay, Jordan Cab, Seghesio Zinfandel, Duckhorn Merlot, The Prisoner Red Blend. It's a greatest-hits lineup rather than a deep cut collection, but the hits are solid. European representation is thin but present — Veuve Clicquot holds down Champagne, Santa Margherita covers Italian whites. Don't come here looking for natural wine or obscure Rhône producers; do come here knowing your steak will have a proper bottle to sit next to.
Twelve to eighteen pours by the glass is legitimately generous for a steakhouse at this price point, spanning sparkling, white, rosé, and red. At $10–$18 a glass, you're not getting robbed, and having something like Veuve Clicquot as a glass option is a nice touch. No real indication the list rotates, which means what you see is likely what you'll see next visit too.
Jordan Cabernet Sauvignon, Alexander Valley — $95
Retail is around $60, so the markup is reasonable by steakhouse standards — under 2x, which is basically honesty in this industry. Jordan is a crowd-pleasing, food-friendly Cab that punches above its price at the table, and it won't embarrass you in front of a client or a date.
Seghesio Zinfandel, Sonoma
Everyone at a steakhouse gravitates to Cabernet and never looks back. That's a shame when Seghesio is on the list. It's one of the best Zinfandel producers in California — bold, spicy, and a natural with red meat. Most people walk right past it, which means more for the people who know.
Santa Margherita Pinot Grigio, Alto Adige
At $46 a bottle, you're paying nearly double retail for a wine that's fine — just fine. Santa Margherita is the Pinot Grigio of people who don't really drink Pinot Grigio, and at a steakhouse it's even more out of place. There are better ways to spend $46 on this list.
Duckhorn Merlot, Napa Valley + Filet Mignon
Duckhorn Merlot is plush and structured without the muscle of a big Cab — exactly what a lean, buttery filet needs. The wine doesn't overpower the cut, and the cut doesn't expose any weakness in the wine. It's a classic match that the list makes easy to order.
✔️ The Bottom Line
Republic Chophouse is doing the right things with wine for a downtown Green Bay steakhouse — fair markups, enough depth to make choosing interesting, and proper bottle selections to anchor a big meal. It's not going to make a wine obsessive drive in from Milwaukee, but if you're already here for the ribeye, you won't be disappointed by what's in your glass.
East River / De Pere Road Corridor · Green Bay · Classic American Supper Club / Steak and Seafood
The English Inn's wine list isn't going to win any awards, but it's priced honestly, covers the bases for a classic steak-and-seafood crowd, and that Tawny Port alone is worth the trip. Send your supper club-loving friends here without hesitation — just don't send the natural wine obsessives.
Crowd Pleasers
Fair
Basic Stemmed
Willing but Green
Set & Forget
Acceptable
East Green Bay · Green Bay · Sushi / Japanese
Come to Sushi Lover for the sushi — the wine list is clearly not the point and nobody's pretending otherwise. If you're drinking wine tonight, stick to the rosé or the plum wine and save the serious bottle for a restaurant that cares.
Grocery Store
Fair
Basic Stemmed
Willing but Green
Set & Forget
Acceptable
Stadium District / Titletown · Green Bay · Upscale American / Rooftop
Taverne in the Sky is a perfectly competent hotel wine list with a knockout view as its wingman — fair prices on the accessible end, solid big-name bottle selection, and enough range to keep a mixed table happy. We wouldn't make a special trip for the wine alone, but if you're already there watching the Packers light up across the street, you won't be drinking badly.
Solid Range
Fair
Basic Stemmed
Willing but Green
Set & Forget
Proper
West Side / Oneida Street · Green Bay · Upscale American Steakhouse & Seafood
1951 West is a safe, competent wine destination for steakhouse loyalists who want familiar California heavyweights without any curveballs. If you're chasing discovery, look elsewhere — but if you're ordering a ribeye and want a bottle that won't let you down, Jordan or Caymus will carry the night.
Crowd Pleasers
Steep
Basic Stemmed
Willing but Green
Set & Forget
Acceptable
West Side · Green Bay · Casual American
TGI Fridays Green Bay is not a wine destination — it's a place where wine is an afterthought flanked by endless appetizer deals and frozen cocktails. If you're here, get the happy hour $5 pours, drink the Ste. Michelle Riesling or La Crema Pinot Noir, and save your wine ambitions for somewhere that has them too.
Grocery Store
Steep
Basic Stemmed
MIA
Occasional
Acceptable
East Side · Green Bay · American Steakhouse
LongHorn is a perfectly fine place to eat a steak in Green Bay — just don't expect the wine list to keep up with the kitchen. Order a cocktail, split a bottle of the Malbec if you must, and save the serious wine drinking for somewhere that cares.
Crowd Pleasers
Steep
Basic Stemmed
Willing but Green
Set & Forget
Acceptable
Pueblo Riverwalk / Downtown · Pueblo · Upscale Steakhouse
Twenty One Steak is the best wine program in Pueblo, which is a real thing worth saying out loud. The markups sting and the list plays it safe, but there are genuinely good bottles here if you know where to look — and for a special night on the riverwalk, it delivers.
Solid Range
Steep
Basic Stemmed
Willing but Green
Set & Forget
Acceptable
Downtown · New Braunfels · Upscale Steakhouse
Myron's is a dependable, handsome steakhouse with a wine list that matches its DNA — safe, California-heavy, and marked up the way every steakhouse in Texas marks up wine. Come for the prime ribeye and order the Jordan; you'll leave happy.
Crowd Pleasers
Steep
Basic Stemmed
Willing but Green
Set & Forget
Proper
La Frontera · Round Rock · Upscale Steakhouse
Perry's Round Rock is a well-oiled steakhouse wine program that delivers exactly what it promises — California confidence, proper stems, a knowledgeable sommelier, and markups to match the white tablecloths. If you're celebrating something and someone else is paying, you'll drink well; if you're watching the tab, navigate carefully.
Solid Range
Steep
Varietal Specific
Knowledgeable & Friendly
Set & Forget
Proper
One wine list review, one adventure pick, one quick tip, and a personal note. Every week. Under 500 words.