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Matching Wine and Food |
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The successful combination of food and wine at table
brings out the best in both the meal and the wine.
Rules about matching food and wine aim to provide
guidance in this difficult art. They should not
however be interpreted so rigidly that they inhibit
the desire to experiment.
The systematic approach to matching food and wine
devised by the Association of Italian Sommeliers is
based on the principles of analogy and contrast.
Analogy
Food and wine can be matched by analogy in different
ways, according to:
Style of Cuisine: following the rule that the
best combinations are between complimentary styles,
country wines match country cooking, refined cuisine
deserves fine wines and local wines are best drunk with
local specialties.
Colour: following the rule of colour matches,
white wines are prefered with light coloured foods:
(seafood, shellfish, chicken and veal with light sauces)
and red wines with dark coloured foods (salame, red
meats, game pigeon, duck, dishes with brown sauces).
The main exceptions to this rule are cheeses and
desserts.
Aroma: delicate wines match foods of subtle
flavors. Foods with stronger flavors call for aromatic
wines. Wines with rich bouquets are needed with smoked
or spicy foods.
Structure: full-bodied wines accompany dishes
with rich textures and flavours.
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Contrast
In wine tasting the sensation of balance on the
palate between contrasting tastes and textures is
what sets fine wines apart from everyday ones. In
gastronomy the successful matching of food and wine
depends on the same principle of balancing
contrasting flavours. For example, rich foods need
dry or tannic wines with good acidity and an
aromatic vein and sharp-flavoured foods need soft
wines with moderate to generous alcohol.
Highly seasoned foods need strong, mellow wines
while bitter-flavoured foods need soft, smooth wines
with a slightly sweet vein.
If one of the contrasting tastes (sweet, acid, salty/spicy
or bitter) predominates, it will cover the others
and spoil the balance. In the case of foods with
overwhelming flavours it is necessary to choose a
wine on the basis of analogy rather than contrast.
Desserts call for sweet wines for instance, and do
not go well with dry ones, especially spumanti.
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