The Jancis Robinson Story | Mission Blind Tasting | Wine writing competition

WWC26 – Sauvignon Blanc: an airport's perfect pairing, by Jaycey Ells

• 1 min read
A glass of Sauvignon Blanc at an airport bar

After a first round of judging, we’re delighted to begin publishing the best of this year’s writing competition entries. All selected entries are published unedited, and authorship of every entry was anonymised for the first-round judges. To kick things off, wine lover Jaycey Ells writes this entry to our 2026 wine writing competition about her favourite pairing for airports.

Jaycey Ells writes Jaycey Ells is a wine lover and storyteller based in Bozeman, Montana. With a background spanning restaurant management, event production, and education, she approaches wine through lived experience rather than dogma. Her writing focuses on the small, often overlooked moments where wine becomes something more than what’s in the glass: an anchor, a ritual, a story. She is especially drawn to the intersection of wine, place, and human behavior, shaped by two decades of working in the service industry. When she’s not writing or working, she’s building a deeper relationship with wine, one glass, one story at a time – responsibly.

Sauvignon Blanc: an airport’s perfect pairing

When I arrive at an airport, my priorities are simple: get through security, find my gate, then find the nearest bar. It’s there that I settle into the soft familiarity of my most reliable pairing: the airport Sauvignon Blanc.

I want to be clear, Sauvignon Blanc is not my favorite wine. But it has its place in the right environments. And airports are the only place where I always drink the same wine. Not sometimes. Not when the list is uninspired or the bartender looks too tired to make a margarita. Always. Sauvignon Blanc, at whatever temperature, in whatever glass they decide is appropriate. It’s less a desire than a ritual at this point, and like most rituals, it exists to impose a little order on a space designed to dissolve it.

Airports are strange places to exist. Time behaves differently there. They are lawless in some respects and highly regulated in others. Morning flights come with wine. Red-eyes come with wine. Delays come with extra wine. You can be sitting at a bar in a business suit at 7am and no one questions it. The rules that govern ordinary life loosen somewhere between security and the gate. In that dislocation, Sauvignon Blanc becomes an anchor and the airport bar is its point of contact.Airport bars operate on a kind of controlled urgency. They are fast enough to keep pace with departures, but slow enough to remind you that you are, for the moment, staying put. The glass it arrives in is never polished, but it does arrive quickly, and slightly too full. 

The first sip is always sharper than expected. Acid first. Then the citrus; lime, sometimes grapefruit; then occasionally something greener, like cut grass or the faint bitterness of herbs. Finally, if you’re lucky, it ends with the high notes of tropical guava and pineapple. There is also, if I’m honest, a practical element at play here. Sauvignon Blanc is assertive enough to give me back my own airspace. Its aromatics: citrus, green edges, that signature pungency, push outward, creating a boundary between me and the accumulated scents of travel; the coffee gone stale, fast food, and someone else’s perfume worn too heavily in a confined space. It is not aggressive, but it is present. It holds its ground. No matter which Sauvignon Blanc you have in your glass, the puckering acid and fragrance of ripe fruits cut cleanly through the recycled air, through the fatigue of early mornings or long connections, through the low-level anxiety of moving through systems you cannot control.

There is comfort in its predictability and precision. Although Sauvignon Blanc is never entirely the same, its structure is reliable. Marlborough versions arrive loud, all brightness and insistence, bold flavors announcing themselves over the ambient noise of rolling suitcases and muffled overhead announcements. Loire expressions are quieter, more restrained, carrying a kind of mineral steadiness that feels grounding before take off. Any will do. The point is recognition, not perfection. You take that first sip and think, ‘Hello, old friend.’ And in a place where nothing else quite behaves as expected, where flights are delayed, gates change, people appear and disappear before even being noticed, that small moment of normality matters more than it should. Because in an airport, nothing exists in isolation. Not even you.

Around you, the airport resolves into a series of fleeting human moments. Airports compress humanity into a series of fleeting vignettes. A woman crying quietly into her phone. A family negotiating snacks and exhaustion. Someone in a suit typing furiously, already elsewhere in their mind. You sit among them, temporarily adjacent to dozens of lives that will never interact with yours again. There is an intimacy to it, but also a distance. Everyone is passing through. And in that, the airport bar becomes a kind of liminal neutral ground. No one lingers too long, but everyone stays just long enough. Long enough for one glass. Long enough to make a friend. Long enough to have two stories intersect for a few moments in time. You are all strangers on the same side quest: have one last exhale before the chaos of travel resumes. And on that quest, my script is always the same, “A glass of Sauvignon Blanc, please.” This routine is a small assertion of self in a place that asks you, repeatedly, to move, to wait, to comply. A place where you are invisible. 

And then, somewhere between sips, that begins to change. There is a particular moment somewhere between the second sip and the midpoint of the glass when you feel briefly, improbably settled. Not home, not destination, but like you belong. You are breathing your own air, chatting with the stranger next to you about nothing, and yet, you feel seen. And then, inevitably, it ends. The bill arrives. The boarding group is called. You take that one, final, large gulp, and the glass is left behind, barely remembered as soon as you stand. You are invisible again. 

The best part about Sauvignon Blanc is that it does not demand reflection. It does not insist on being the point of the experience and the finish is clean and forgettable. It simply accompanies you, faithfully, without asking too much in return. In another context, I’d likely choose differently, more carefully. An aged Rheingau Riesling, or punchy Napa Cab perhaps. Something more complex, more contemplative, more worthy of attention. But airports are not places for that kind of drink. They are places for thresholds, for departures, for the quiet management of uncertainty. In that space, I don’t need a wine that challenges me. I need a wine that meets me where I am. Sauvignon Blanc does exactly that. And so I order that perfect pairing. Every time.

The photo, of Sauvignon Blanc at an airport bar, is the author’s own.

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