Culinary school wine list that actually earns respect
Downtown Β· Grand Rapids Β· New American / Teaching Restaurant Β· Visit Website β
Reviewed June 29, 2026
Wingman Metrics
You walk into a college teaching restaurant expecting binder menus and safe Chardonnay, and instead you find Chablis Grand Cru and Sauternes anchoring a curated prix-fixe pairing menu. The list is short β 20 to 40 bottles depending on the semester β but whoever is building it is paying attention. This is not the wine program you expected to find at 151 Fountain St.
The list splits its attention between Michigan and France, and it works better than it has any right to. On the French side, you've got genuine ambition: a Domaine Sigaut-Bondek Chablis Grand Cru 'VaudΓ©sir' anchoring the tasting menu, a Domaine de Gry-Sablon Morgon 'Douby' from Beaujolais showing up as a mid-course pour, and a ChΓ’teau Gravas Sauternes closing things out at dessert. The Michigan wine designation isn't just a sticker β local producers show up on the list with real intent, not as an afterthought. The gap is depth: outside the tasting menu pairings, the broader bottle selection stays in the $30β$60 range and doesn't venture far into discovery territory.
Six to twelve pours on any given visit, rotating with the curriculum and seasonal menus β meaning what's available in October is not what you'll find in March. That volatility is a feature if you like surprises, a bug if you came back specifically for something. The glass price range of $9β$15 is genuinely fair for the quality level being poured, and G.H. Mumm Champagne making an appearance as an amuse-bouche pairing is a strong signal that this program isn't cutting corners.
Domaine de Gry-Sablon Morgon 'Douby' 2023 β $15
Morgon at this price β especially from a producer with actual roots in Beaujolais β is a steal anywhere. At a teaching restaurant it's practically a gift. This is real Gamay with structure, not the fruity glug most people associate with Beaujolais. Order it.
Michigan wines (local producer selection)
Most diners skip the Michigan pours assuming they're filler β they're not. Heritage holds an official Michigan Wine Restaurant designation, which means there's genuine curation happening here. If your server can tell you what's currently on, ask. You might find something worth tracking down at the source.
G.H. Mumm Champagne
Mumm is a perfectly fine Champagne house, but at a restaurant already pouring Chablis Grand Cru and Sauternes from serious producers, it's the one selection that feels like it was chosen by a distributor rep rather than someone with a point of view. It's fine. It's just the least interesting thing on the menu.
Domaine Sigaut-Bondek Chablis Grand Cru 'VaudΓ©sir' 2023 + Course one of the prix-fixe tasting menu
Chablis Grand Cru has that saline, flinty tension that cuts through rich opening courses β typically something with seafood or composed vegetable preparations in a fine-dining context. The kitchen is building the pairing deliberately, and it shows. Let them lead on this one.
π² The Bottom Line
A teaching restaurant that could embarrass a few actual restaurants on the wine front β fair prices, genuine producers, and a France-meets-Michigan list that has more intention behind it than most spots charging twice as much. Go in without expectations and leave genuinely impressed.
Downtown / Amway Grand Plaza Β· Grand Rapids Β· Spanish / Modern European
MDRD is a Wild Card because it earns its badge the hard way: a hotel rooftop in the Midwest has no business carrying Bodega Chacra or a thoughtful local Michigan Pinot, and yet here we are. Markups keep it from being a destination wine list, but if you're already up there for the views and the paella, there are worse ways to spend your glass pours.
Solid Range
Steep
Basic Stemmed
Willing but Green
Set & Forget
Acceptable
Downtown Β· Grand Rapids Β· Fondue-focused American/Swiss-style chain
The Melting Pot's wine list is the dining equivalent of a reliable sedan β it gets you where you're going without any surprises, good or bad. Send a friend here for the experience, not the wine, but reassure them they won't be embarrassed by what's in the glass.
Crowd Pleasers
Steep
Basic Stemmed
Willing but Green
Set & Forget
Acceptable
Kentwood / Southeast Β· Grand Rapids Β· Upscale Casual American
Cooper's Hawk Kentwood is exactly what it is β a well-run chain winery restaurant with fair prices, a crowd-pleasing list, and staff that's enthusiastic if not deeply expert. Don't come here expecting to find your new favorite grower Champagne; do come here knowing you'll drink something decent without getting gouged.
Crowd Pleasers
Fair
Basic Stemmed
Willing but Green
Set & Forget
Proper
Midtown Β· Grand Rapids Β· Gastro Pub / Contemporary American Comfort Food
The Friesian is a neighborhood pub that happens to have wine β and there's nothing wrong with that. Come on a Wednesday when glasses are half price, order the Tempranillo or the Malbec, and stop overthinking it.
Crowd Pleasers
Fair
Basic Stemmed
Willing but Green
Seasonal Rotation
Acceptable
Downtown Β· Grand Rapids Β· Casual Italian-American, Sports Bar
Uccello's Downtown is a perfectly solid place to watch a game and eat a pizza β just don't show up expecting the wine list to match the ambition of the kitchen. Order the Nero d'Avola, grab it during happy hour if you can, and save your serious wine drinking for somewhere else.
Crowd Pleasers
Steep
Basic Stemmed
Rotating Cast
Occasional
Acceptable
Downtown / Riverfront Β· Grand Rapids Β· Modern Spanish
MDRD is a hotel rooftop bar that actually tried with its wine list, and in Grand Rapids β or anywhere, really β that clears the bar. The markups have some sharp edges and the list is short, but the Spanish focus is genuine and the Txakoli alone makes it worth a visit.
Small but Thoughtful
Steep
Basic Stemmed
Willing but Green
Occasional
Acceptable
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