It might help your viewing experience if you would please play Beethoven's Symphony #3 in the background. That's because he named that symphony "Eroica" and this wine is named after that symphony.
The wine is a joint venture of Washington's Chateau Ste. Michelle and Ernst Loosen, a highly regarded winemaker from Mosel, Germany. (Beethoven was also German.) The wine is made entirely from Riesling grapes and is consistently top-drawer. Though some people consider it slightly sweet, I think it's dry but very fruity. It's that very fruity characteristic that in my mind sometimes misleads people to think it is a little sweet.
Setup
First capture: The tabletop is silver-grey, semi-glossy presentation board and the background is white translucent acrylic. A medium continuous-light lamp behind the background shining toward it and the subject creates the wine's glow and outlines the bottle in dark tones. A small continuous-light lamp high on the left directly lights the left side of the foil and indirectly lights its right side by bouncing light off a white reflector made of translucent vellum on that side. A strip soft box also on the right fitted with a flash unit and positioned at an angle to the reflector adds the small, gradient reflection to the right side of the bottle.
Second capture: The background, a second sheet of the same silver-grey presentation paper, is lit from below by a small continuous-light lamp fitted with a diffusion sock.
Third capture: The label is lit from above by a small continuous-light lamp.
The three captures were merged.