Paring Food & Wine
True or False:
White wine is to be drunk with white meats and fish, red wine goes with
beef, and sweet wines go with desserts, period, and to do it any other way
is courting a visit from the Wine Police.
The answer is False, but the truth
is that until a couple decades ago this is how people decided what to drink
with dinner. Thankfully, our minds have broadened. The current thinking is
that since food can be every bit as complex as wine, the options for
creating rich pairings are staggering. And it cannot be stressed enough: a
successful pairing is one that you find pleasing -- maybe nobody else on the
planet likes Champagne with liverwurst, but you happen to find the
combination absolutely transporting.
If there is a rule of thumb it would
be either to go for complementary flavors or flavors that contrast. For
example, a dish with citrus would be complemented by a fruity wine; a hearty
stew would go well with a full-bodied wine; and a delicately flavored dish,
such as poached sole, would be in good company with a dry, crisp wine.
Whereas a rich cream sauce would contrast nicely with a highly acidic dry
wine; and a simple snack of bread and cheese would turn positively ambrosial
when paired with a complex full-bodied red. The best advice of all is to
experiment, open-mindedly, and frequently.
What follows are some truths about
how wine can react with food:
-
A wine high in tannins (Bordeaux,
for instance) mated with a food high in tannins (like walnuts) will render
the wine almost undrinkably dry and astringent.
-
Protein tends to calm tannins, so
a very tannic wine might be rendered glorious when enjoyed with rare beef.
-
Delicate foods - veal, or filet of
sole for example - will be overwhelmed by a full-bodied red wine. By the
same token, a hearty lasagna will virtually cancel out a dry,
medium-bodied Sauvignon Blanc.
-
A wine can add its primary flavor
to a dish, giving food a layer it didn't start out with.
-
Some wine and food combinations
result in a flavor that was not present in either one and is not meant to
be, metal for instance. Try white turkey meat with red Bordeaux if you
doubt this.
-
Sometimes it's as though this wine
has been searching all its life for this food and fireworks ensue.
-
Tannic wines make sweet foods
taste less sweet; salty foods emphasize tannin.
-
Salty foods mute the sweetness and
enhance the fruitiness of a sweet wine.
-
Wines that are high in acid taste
less acidic with salty or sweet food; acidic wines also can offset oily
foods.
Remember - any combination you enjoy
is a good combination!