Two layers in Enolisa: your cellar vs the global database
Enolisa has two different “wine concepts” that users should not confuse:
My wines (your cellar)
These are wines you save as part of your personal inventory. You can attach purchase info, units, photos, and tastings.Global wines (Global wine pages)
These are canonical wine profiles from Enolisa’s global wine database (with over 1 million wines) used for discovery and recommendations. They are not tied to a specific bottle in your cellar. They have shareable pages and can include additional structured info (origin, grapes, region mapping, etc.).
Global search (what it is)
Enolisa includes a global search screen that queries the global wine database. Users typically use it to:
- Search by wine name or producer
- Discover the correct match before saving a wine
- Open a global wine page when the result includes a global identifier
Global wine pages (global wine details)
Global wine pages are “editorial-like” wine pages inside Enolisa.
They can include:
- Wine identity and origin details
- Grape composition (when available)
- Region visualization (map-based UI when geo data exists)
- Palate Match (how well this wine aligns with your taste profile)
- Community signals (like/dislike)
Shareable web links (important for recommendations)
Global wine pages can be shared via the Enolisa website:
- Pattern:
https://enolisa.com/v/{wineId}
These links can open the corresponding wine page in the app (via deep-link mapping) when the app is installed.
The “To discover” list
“To discover” is a list for wines you want to try in the future.
Typical use cases:
- Save recommended wines from the home carousel.
- Keep a personal backlog of wines to look for in shops/restaurants.
- Separate “I want to try this” from “I own this bottle right now”.
Because it’s a discovery list, it is not the same as My wines inventory.
