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Food and Wine Pairing

Food and Wine Pairing. FOOD AND WINE PAIRING IS SUBJECTIVE: Everyone has a different palate: Germans say something is dry, we say it’s sweet. People who eat spicy food experience wine differently from someone who eats pasta and potatoes The TONGUE

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Food and Wine Pairing

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  1. Food and Wine Pairing • FOOD AND WINE PAIRING IS SUBJECTIVE: Everyone has a different palate: • Germans say something is dry, we say it’s sweet. • People who eat spicy food experience wine differently from someone who eats pasta and potatoes • The TONGUE • The tip senses sweetness = fruit, alcohol, sugar • The front sides salt • The back sides acid • And very back bitter • each section has buds of different intensities • The NOSE • Very sensitive in picking out minute differences in aroma • Aromas are triggered by nose and brain connecting to memory • The more senses you sense in a day the more you build up in memory bank • The palate is located at top of mouth close to throat, this area is sensitive and connects to the nasal cavity • AROMA is very important • What we perceive as tastes are really aromas: floral, fruits, nuts, vegetables, spice, herbs, roasted flavors, animal and alcohol are all aromas. • THE SENSES • Sweet, Bitter, Sour (Found in food and wine) • Hot and Salty (come from food) • 6th sense UNAMI (found in food and wine) • Unami: “Delicious” or “Savory” • Found in foods with high protein such as consumes, aged meats, shitaki mushrooms, dried seaweed, shellfish, raw seafood, soy sauce & tomatoes • Amino acid: L-MSG (l-glutamate-monosodium glutamate) • Related to spiritual sense: “feeling of perfect quality in a taste or some special emotional circumstance” • Sweet and Unami are the only senses that are perceived as pleasant • Can have adverse affects on wine, making wines more tannic, bitter or metallic tasting

  2. Food and Wine Pairing COMPARE • Find a balance; use the dominant flavors of a dish to match the wine • Weight of a wine should match the weight of a dish • If a dish uses a specific wine in the sauce use the same wine in the pairing • Foods with sweetness or acidity is paired w/ a wine of equal or higher sweetness or acidity • E.G. spaghetti & Barbera; Chicken in cream sauce & Chardonnay; Dulce de Leche & Sauternes • Focus on bridging ingredients of a dish such as berries, mushrooms, citrus etc… and use a wine that pairs with those same ingredients History • Food and wine goes back centuries, in modern times it has become more trendy • In 1928 Escoffer wrote that red meat and burgundy should be paired, as Champagne with entremets • In 1931 Micheline Guide recommended wines with dishes • 1939 a systematic approach by Pierre Andrieu paired wine with the evolution of the meal • Old Systematic Approach: Red Wine with red Meat. White Wine with Fish. Systematic Method (Course wine) *Dry before Sweet White before Red Young before Old Simple before complex Light before Heavy * Exceptions: Foie gras with Sauternes • Modern approach is a Lateral Approach with wine-dish combinations regardless of sequence. • Today there are so many subtle foods and cuisines where matching food and wine takes more into consideration. • Use an intermezzo or water as a palate cleanser when there is a change in coursing CONTRAST • Salmon with butter sauce with higher acidic Pinot Noir • Sour or acidic dishes are paired with a sweeter wine • Foods with richness are paired w/ acidic wines to cut through. • Intensity in flavors can provide a good contrast. E.g. An intense Alsace Riesling contrasted with a rich fatty roasted goose work very well COMPLETE • Food and wine enhance each other. Such as salty prosciutto with melon • Use wine as a condiment for the dish being eaten. • Fish or seafood with acidic wine if you like lemon and butter sauce • Lobster with a buttery chardonnay if you like your lobster with butter • Salty food with sweet wine • Salty food with Acidic wine • Spicy food with sweet wine

  3. Acidity Where does it come from? Grapes = Tartaric, Malic and Citric Acids Fermentation = Succinic, Lactic and Acetic Acids Acidity comes from under ripeness; as sugars increase acidity decreases. The key is to get to a point where acidity and sugars are in balance Acidity gives wine it’s shine or brilliance Influences aromas Good acidity makes a wine food friendly Affects of Acidity Has the opposite affect of sweetness (milk is a warm sweet feel; tea w/ lemon is fresh clean feel) Penetrates richness of ingredients & sauce (butter/Cream) to refresh palate Mirrors tart items (Vinegar, lemon, tomato & chutney) Mitigates oiliness, pizza, sautéed, deep fried Brings out flavor in food Changes in Acidity Levels raises concerns Modern winemaking and commercialism of wine has started to produce wines of lower acidity & big fruit. Wines are not food friendly & are more suitable to being drunk on their own. The healthy culture of wine being a normal mealtime component is more & more eroded Leading to more consumption of wine on own. Can be said that it is more suitable to a culture concerned with alcohol consumption than with the dining experience. Critics and Press are big culprits. Robert Parker is partial to fruit bombs and non-acidity The DANGER: soon we won’t be able to tell the difference between a wine from Spain, Italy, France or California. Modern winemaking is based on trends…unfortunately the trends don’t last forever, and not always the best in quality. Sweetness Wines are classified into different categories of sweetness: DRY: no detectable sweetness OFF DRY: White Zinfandel MEDIUM DRY: German Kabinett MEDIUM SWEET: Vouvray SWEET: Trockenbeerenauslese & Sauternes Sweetness comes from residual sugar, left after fermentation has been stopped and from acidity levels Low acid wines can seem sweeter than they really are High acid wines mask the sugar levels Fruity Character gives impression of sweetness, but it is fruit sweetness not sugar sweetness; as a result of ripe grapes giving illusion of sweetness Affects of Sweetness Takes the edge off hot foods Matches well with slightly sweet condiments such as chutneys Good contrast to salty flavors such as Asian foods Very sweet wines work well with salty cheeses, Roquefort Important Wine Components Bitterness • Bitterness adds balance, character and appealing flavors to wine • Not Present in White Wines • Is a result of high tannin levels especially green tannins associated with under-ripe grapes • Can come from aggressive pressing of grapes, fermentation choices, types of oak & aging • Affects of Bitterness • Bitterness can make sweet foods bitter • Pair with like flavored foods: grilled, charred, blackened • Pair with bitter foods: broccoli, arugula, eggplant & bell peppers Oak and Alcohol • High alcoholic wines can give off tastes to food • Alcohol is a sweet liquid; wines w/ high alcohol have a hint of sweetness • Alcohol can also influence weight and body, the higher the alcohol the more body • Oak and Alcohol creates richness & intensity due to oak treatment, fermentation and aging • Affects of Alcohol and Oak • Alcohol accentuates heat and salt • Oak wines match well with similar flavors (nuts, toast, smoke & Caramel) • Roundness and Richness should match with similar textured foods • Rich meats, fish & Chicken w/ cream= full bodied chardonnays, light foods will be overpowered by wines of weight and richness Saltiness • Saltiness is a craving component of taste • We salt our savory foods, foods w/ Unami…work with wines w/ Unami • Saltiness cuts and accentuates sweetness • Wine doesn’t have salt but has affects on Salty foods • Affect of Salty Foods • Acidity in wine cuts saltiness in food. Champagne & whites work with salty dishes, seafood: better than less tart reds • Salt will accentuate the tannins in a wine • Salt accentuates the alcohol in wine • Moderately sweet wines pair well with salty foods

  4. Tips In Pairing WHAT IF THE FOOD IS: • Acidic: A dish with citrus or vinegar should be paired with a acidic wine. • Duck with oranges needs a more acidic red wine than Duck with olives • Salty: dishes with saltiness, such as soy sauce or seaweed will make wines with tannins more tannic and bitter. • Sweet: If the food is sweeter than wine then the wine will taste thin and tart. • Ice cream is almost impossible to pair. • Highly Seasoned or Spicy: These foods can fatigue and numb the palate and the wine can get lost. • Wines with low tannins and low alcohol levels are best • Sweet wines contrast well • Rich and Fatty Foods: Foods with cream sauces, fatty steaks or rich fowl • full bodied wines such as Chardonnay, Cabernet, Zinfandel, Merlot or Syrah are recommended SYNERGY: neither a wine nor food should overpower the other • Base Ingredients are the main portion of the dish (the Protein) • Bridge Ingredients are those extras on a dish that add to the flavor such as mushrooms, berries, beans and herbs such as ginger, tarragon, cinnamon, cloves • Cooking Method • Grilling, Roasting, Sautéing and braising are preferred methods to pair with wine • poaching, Steaming or smoking limit the wine choices • Easy Matches: Risotto and Chicken • Difficult Matches: Asparagus, Artichokes, Strong Cheeses • Chiles numb palate • Eggs Mask wine flavors too much Unami • Vinegar and Pickled foods can rob tastes and make wines more astringent • However balsamic and pickled ginger work well MARRIAGES MADE IN HEAVEN “the marriages between two exceptional beings are as rare in gastronomy as they are in life.” Marc Meneau ‘Larousse des Vins et Vignobles de France’ Oysters and Chablis Roast Lamb and Bordeaux Roquefort and Sauternes Stilton and Vintage Port Sole and Burgundy Goat Cheese and Sancerre Caviar and Champagne BBQ Ribs and Zinfandel Stewed or Game Casseroles and Barolo

  5. ACIDIC WHITE SWEET WHITE FRUITY RED ACIDIC RED SALT SPICE APPLE/SUGAR LEMON CHOCOLATE PROTEIN

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