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Matching Wine with Food

The first thing to remember about matching food and wine is to forget the rules. Forget about shoulds and shouldn'ts.

Forget about complicated systems for selecting the right wine to enhance the food on the table. This is not rocket science. It's common sense.

Follow your instincts

Just choose a wine that you want to drink by itself. Despite all the hoopla about matching wine and food, you will probably drink most of the wine without the benefit of food- either before the food is served or after you've finished your meal. Therefore, you will not go too far wrong if you make sure the food is good and the wine is, too. Even if the match is not perfect, you will still enjoy what you're drinking.

Some of today's food-and-wine pontificators suggest that mediocre wines can be improved by serving them with the right food. The flaw in that reasoning, however, is the scenario described above. If the match does not quite work as well as you hope, you're stuck with a mediocre wine. So don't try to get too fancy. First pick a good wine.

This is where common sense comes in. The old rule about white wine with fish and red wine with meat made perfect sense in the days when white wines were light and fruity and red wines were tannic and weighty. But today, when most Chardonnays are heavier and fuller-bodied than most Pinot Noirs and even some Cabernets, color coding does not always work.

Red wines as a category are distinct from whites in two main ways: tannins--many red wines have them, few white wines do--and flavors. White and red wines share many common flavors; both can be spicy, buttery, leathery, earthy or floral. But the apple, pear and citrus flavors in many white wines seldom show up in reds, and the currant, cherry and stone fruit flavors of red grapes usually do not appear in whites.

In the wine-and-food matching game, these flavor differences come under the heading of subtleties. You can make better wine choices by focusing on a wine's size and weight. Like human beings, wines come in all dimensions. To match them with food, it's useful to know where they fit in a spectrum, with the lightest wines at one end and fuller-bodied wines toward the other end.


Some examples of Wine & Food matching

Food

Wines

BBQ Fish

Beef Roast

Casseroles

Chateaubriand

Plain Roast Chicken

Chinese Food

 

Crab

Curries

Duck

Goulash

Lamb Roast

Pasta – Mild Sauce

Pizza

Salmon

Sausages

Sea food

 

Steaks

Sushi

Thai Food

Turkey

Veal

 

Semillion, Verdelo, Riesling

Shiraz, Chambourcin

Shiraz, Caburnet, Pinot Noir, Chambourcin

Mature Red Shiraz, Chambourcin

Oaked Chardonnay

Semillon, Verdelho, Savignon

Blanc, Pirot Gris

Lightly oaked Chardonnay

Chilles Rose, Sparkling reds, Merlot

Pinot Noir or Sparkling Red

Chambourcin

Shiraz, Chambourcin

Shiraz, Merlot

Merlot, Pinot Noir, Chardonnay

Pinot Noir, Chardonnay

Shiraz, Merlot

Verdelo, Sauvignon, Blanc

Unwooded Chardonnay, Sevillon

Shiraz, Cabernet

Reisling, Sevillion, Sauvignon, Blanc

Verdelho, Savignon Blanc

Shiraz, Pinot Noir, Chardonnay

Pinot Gris, Chambourcin

( A good wine is one You personally like, not what someone else tells you is good. )

Fish/Shellfish: 

Delicate wines with little oak or strong character sparkling wine and Riesling or un-oaked Chardonnay.


Poultry: 

Traditional method sparkling wines, medium to full bodied whites and light to medium bodied reds.

 

Pork: 

Choose a wine with high acidity to cut through the fatty content of this dish.  Do not use soft oaked and buttery Chardonnays – but rather dry Riesling.

 

Lamb: 

Good Bordeaux:  New Zealand Cabernet and Merlot and Cabernet blends from the Margaret and South Australia regions.  High acidity and wines of some complexity will satisfy this dish.

 

Beef: 

Australian Shiraz or Cabernet Sauvignon.

 

Venison or Game: 

Grenache, Shiraz and Pinot Noir.

 

Vegetarian: 

A wide range of wines suit these dishes.

 

Cheese: 

Blue cheese goes well with tawny or vintage port.  (do not use the younger or sweeter versions such as Ruby).

 

Creamier chesses: 

Dessert styles such as late harvest or Noble Rot wines.  A full bodied Sparkling wine, such as a demi-sec Champagne.

 

Dessert: 

Dry to sweet dessert wines depending on dish.  Berry fruits with sparkling wine.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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