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A basic
understanding of the food, the wine and how the components and flavors in
each interact can make it easy to find a successful pairing on a daily
basis, and can greatly increase the chances of finding an exciting synergy
between wine and food.
Start with the Wine
When you’re first trying your hand at pairing, we recommend starting with
a wine and then selecting and creating the food around it. The simple
reason for this is that it’s much easier to tweak a food recipe to make it
more compatible with the wine, than it is to start blending your own
wines.
Pick a wine you know a love already. This way, you’ll have a sense of its
flavors already, which you can use as a starting point to experiment with
food pairings. Plus, if the recipe doesn’t work, at the very least you’ll
be able to enjoy a nice bottle of wine!
Be ‘Prepared’
With The Food
Forget the white wine with white meat and red with red meats. The best
place to begin your food selection is with an understanding of how the
food is being prepared – the components and flavors in the dish that are
integral to pairing it with wine. This is why food and wine pairing in
restaurants can be challenging. You think that everything will be fine and
then discover that the dish has a different flavor (Why did the chef add
olives, they didn’t mention them on the menu?), texture (Wow, I didn’t
know that the sea scallops and bay scallops are so different!) or cooking
method (I expected the chicken to be grilled, but it is poached.).
The three key points
To keep in mind when selecting the food are
1. The food item being paired;
2. The cooking method of that item; and
3. The additional flavors or sauces
The fundamental rule is to begin by pairing delicate wines with delicate
flavors, medium-bodied wines with medium-weight or intensity flavors, and
strongly flavored foods with wines that will stand up to their pungency.
To help keep things simple as you get started, we’ve put together the
following guide. Like anything, these are not absolute rules, but good
guidelines to follow to help create the most successful and interesting
pairings.
|
FLAVORS |
Delicate |
Earthy; Hearty |
Meaty Pungent Spicy |
|
WINE TYPE |
Riesling
Sauvignon Blanc |
Chardonnay
Viognier
Pinot Noir
Sangiovese
Merlot |
Cabernet Sauvignon
Syrah
Zinfandel |
|
FOODS |
Salads/Vegetables Fish |
Poultry, Game Birds, Pork, Veal |
Beef, Offal |
|
SAUCES |
Lemon based |
Butter; Cream |
Meat
Wine Demiglace |
|
PREPARATION |
Poached/Steamed |
Sautéed Baked Roasted |
Grilled Braised |
To make the
wine even more compatible you can use the sauce to try to imitate flavors
in the wine. For instance, mushrooms work well with Pinot Noir, tomatoes
with Sangiovese, herbs and mint with Merlot and Cabernet Sauvignon, and
dark berries with Shiraz.
As we noted, it’s not critical that you memorize this guide and follow it
to the letter. The important point is to use this to help learn how the
different types of flavors pair with different wines. This understanding
of food components and wine flavors is actually much more helpful that
simply matching a food to a wine and the basic chicken breast is a great
example of why.
Imagine a chicken breast poached (i.e. cooked in water) with a light lemon
herb sauce. This might be a dish that could be friendly with light to
medium bodied white wines like Pinot Gris and Sauvignon Blanc. Now add a
cream sauce and you can move up in body to a fuller bodied wine, maybe a
Chardonnay. Or try it roasted and suddenly the flavors are such that it
can marry with light to medium bodied reds, like Pinot Noir or Sangiovese.
Grill it and it becomes great with fuller bodied reds, even Zinfandel or
Shiraz (Syrah).
On The
Contrary
In addition to marrying foods with complementary wines, many people like
to create a contrast between various components in the dish and the wine
in much the same way that you would balance sweet dessert recipe with a
tangy sauce. This is as simple as enjoying a crisp acidic wine like a
Sauvignon Blanc to cut through a very buttery sauce, or possibly a more
oaky Chardonnay with a very tart or sweet dish.
The result is different, but the approach remains the same – consider the
flavor of both the wine and food to create a specific taste experience.
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