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Food & Wine Matching - Summer

Matching Salads with Wine
There’s a huge array of different salad leaves available. You can control the way they match your wine by adding key ingredients. Sliced pear, for example, will introduce a sweetness that goes well with a ripe Riesling or Chenin Blanc.

Herbs will marry with wines that have herbal notes, such as Sauvignon Blanc (nettles, tarragon) and Cabernet Sauvignon (mint). A scattering of red berries would match with Beaujolais. And croutons or toasted nuts would complement slightly toasty, oaked wines.

By the same token, the addition of ingredients that contrast with the wine also works. Chopped red chilli will add heat that plays off against the spicy sweetness of Gewurztraminer, for example.

Of all the salad vegetables, fresh tomatoes are particularly difficult to match with wine, due to their high acidity. The best match is Sauvignon Blanc, especially one from New Zealand.

Tomatoes:
Being very acidic, tomatoes are a difficult ingredient to match with wine. Fresh tomatoes in particular demand wines with high acidity and the best match is Sauvignon Blanc, especially those from New Zealand.

For roasted tomatoes a deeper red wine works better. Look to Italy whose reds are noted for their high acidity; select a Barbera or other youthful Italian reds.
  
  A Quick Guide to Wines for Main Course Salads
 

Matching Salad Dressings and Sauces with Wine
The trouble with salad is vinegar! The moment you introduce this ingredient to a dressing you’ll spoil any wine being served. Using mellower vinegars like balsamic or rice vinegar can help, but one of the best tricks is to substitute vinegar with something else.

A method commonly employed by red winemakers is to use red wine instead so that you can drink the same colour wine with the dish (as salads are lightweight, choose light reds to drink). Fruit (squeezed citrus, or pomegranate molasses) is a good substitute for vinegar too.

For example, if you made a lemon and oil dressing you could choose white wines with citrus flavours to match; there are many examples of this – unoaked Chardonnays immediately spring to mind – but select wines that have high levels of acidity to match the sharpness of the citrus.
 
  A Quick Guide to Wines for Salad Dressings
  • Lemon and Oil Sauces: Unoaked Chardonnay, Chenin Blanc, citrus-flavoured Italian wines like Fiano

  • Creamy Sauces like Mayonnaise: Oaked Chardonnay

  • Hollandaise oaked New World Chardonnay and Semillon
Whether you decide to replace the vinegar with lemon or wine, it’s advisable to change the commonly used ‘one part vinegar to three parts oil’ recipe to reduce the dressing’s acidity. This will avoid a ‘war of acids’ on your table. Instead, try to reach a harmony between the wine’s acidity and the dressing’s acid.

There are alternative salad dressings that won’t be so problematical with wine. Mixing oil with soy sauce or a few tablespoons of rich stock produces a less acid, more savoury dressing (although these are salty, so not good with very tannic wines). You could mix the oil with a purée of roasted garlic.
 

Matching Cooked Fruit and Summer Vegetables with Wine
Roasted or grilled fruit and vegetable dishes are virtually a summer staple nowadays, thanks to Mediterranean holidays becoming commonplace during the past 30 or 40 years. The heat used during cooking (whether in the oven, under the grill or on the barbecue) causes the water content to reduce through evaporation, thus concentrating and intensifying flavours.
 
 
  A Quick Guide to Wines for Summer Fruits & Vegetables

Often the addition of ingredients – such as herbs and garlic to vegetables, or perhaps brown sugar and rum to fruits – add further flavours and complexity to dishes.

So these foods require full-flavoured, and sometimes fairly full-bodied, wines:

In the case of cooked vegetable dishes it is often a red rather than a white wine that will provide the best marriage.

For example, roasted aubergine or red peppers have a rich deep
flavour and usually they’re cooked with olive oil, which adds further richness and also fat to the dish.

This all points to a light- to medium bodied (to match the weight of the food) full flavoured wine, perhaps one with tannin to balance the oil; these characteristics are more commonly found in red wine.

Fruits like pineapples and bananas are delicious cooked and are popular barbecue desserts. Their intensified flavours call out for the addition of complementary b, sweet ingredients to a recipe.

Whereas for fresh fruit you’d be looking for not-overtly-sweet lightstyled wines, for cooked fruit consider rich, ultra-sweet wines, like Muscat de Beaumes-de-Venise.
 

Matching Light Meats and Picnic Food with Wine
Picnicking is a great British tradition. Here’s a snapshot of picnic foods and wines to match.
 
Chicken, shellfish, sardines, mackerel and salmon add interest to any salad.

Try a Californian or Australian Chardonnay with grilled chicken thighs or drumsticks, or a white Burgundy or Bourgogne Rouge with cold chicken.

The delicate saltiness of shellfish is well matched by Southern French rosés.

The white wines from Vin du Pays d'Oc region go well with oily fish like sardines, mackerel and salmon – though the latter really cries out for a majestic Chablis or even Champagne.

For cold red meats such as ham, raised pies and pâtés, go for a light, fruity red such as Beaujolais or Pinot Noir.

Matching Picnic Food with Wine
 
  A Quick Guide to Wines for Picnic Food
 

Matching BBQ food with Wine
Aside from cucumber-laden Pimms, there’s nothing more evocative of summertime than the smell of charcoal from a barbecue.

Today’s barbecue parties are more sophisticated than ever before. Burnt-yet-raw chicken drumsticks have been replaced by dishes like char-grilled sea bass and Halloumi cheese kebabs. Such delicious fare deserves the right wine to accompany and complement it.
Read our comprehensive Barbecue Food and Wine Matching guide here
 

Matching Summer Desserts with Wine

Fruits like pineapples and bananas are delicious grilled on the barbecue and their ultra-sweetness demands a sweet wine like Muscat de Beaumes-de-Venise.

But one of the luxuries of summer is the taste of fresh, seasonal fruit, for which you want something lighter and not overly sweet, such as an off-dry German Riesling.

Strawberries & Cream are the essence of English Summers. Serve them with either a Sweet Loire or German Beerenauslese. Strawberries served alone are actually quite high-acid and would be better with a less sweet wine, a medium or medium-dry Champagne would be delicious.

Summer Pudding is very rich, but not quite as sweet because of the addition of blackcurrants, so Beerenauslese is sufficiently sweet.

 
  A Quick Guide to Wines for Summer Desserts
  • Strawberries & Cream Sweet and Medium Sweet Loire or German Wines

  • Strawberries on its own medium or medium-dry Champagne

  • Raspberries pavlova Eiswein, Rutherglen Muscat

  • Raspberries on its own Sweet Loire or German Sweet Wines

  • Summer pudding Auslese or Beerenauslese Rielsing, Barsac or Sauternes

  • Gooseberry crumble, pie or tart Auslese Rielsing

  • Other fresh, citrusy summer fruit off-dry German Riesling