Matching
food & wine
The old rule, red wine with red meat, white wine with fish, was a good
one to follow back in the days of square meals. Today, recipes are more
interesting with a wider range of flavors and textures which makes matching
them with wine more fun and interesting. When picking a wine, look for
a match between the flavor characteristics of the food and wine. Also,
lighter flavored wines usually go better with lighter flavored dishes
and robust wines with robust foods. Here are some guidelines that help
make matching food and wine easier. But in case you lose this guide,
the three most important rules to remember are:
1) Drink what you like.
2) Just about any wine with a meal is better
than NO wine at all.
3) When panic sets in, red wine with red
meat, white wine with fish.
Serving temperature
As a rule, white and sparkling wines are best served well-chilled
(45° to
55° Fahrenheit), with lighter, fruitier whites at the low end of
the scale and fuller, more flavorful whites, such as Chardonnay, at the
upper range. An hour in the refrigerator or a half-hour in the freezer
is usually enough. Over chilling should be avoided, because it stuns
a wine's aromas and flavors.
Red wines should be served at cool room temperature (55° to 65° Fahrenheit),
with lighter, fruitier reds, such as "Beaujolais" or "Pinot
Noir", at the lower range of the scale and fuller-bodied varieties,
such as "Cabernet" and "Zinfandel", at the top.
Of course, specific conditions
may call for exceptions to these rules. On a hot day, for example,
when room temperatures
may run into the 70's or 80's, it's a good idea to chill a full-bodied
red slightly before serving serving, to mute it's alcoholic "heat".
Conversely, a very rich white may be best served at close to room
temperature, so its complex aromas and flavors may be fully appreciated.
Extracting the cork
Stoppers formed from the spongy bark of the cork oak tree have been used
to seal whine containers for over 2000 years. Since the 17th century,
when glass bottles originated, they have been the vintner's preferred
method for protecting wine from air. Today, although there are effective
and inexpensive alternatives to cork -- such as metal screw caps, which
require no implement to open -- wine consumers are still attached to
the romance and tradition of the cork stopper.
|
 |