Top pairings

6 of the best pairings for pinot grigio
That pinot grigio is many people's favourite white wine should come as no surprise - it’s a refreshing, versatile wine that pairs really well with light, summery food and ever-popular Italian staples such as pasta and risotto.
Six top pairings for pinot grigio
- Antipasti, especially seafood and vegetable-based ones like seafood salad or marinated fish like octopus
- Fried fish or vegetables such as fritto misto - or even fish and chips
- Light pasta sauces including seafood like clams, cream or fresh tomato (it’s not so good with more robust meaty sauces). You can even add a splash of the wine to the recipe as I’ve done in this recipe for tiger prawns with tomato and basil sauce. Pinot grigio is great with a carbonara too.
- Light seafood or vegetable-based risottos such as risotto primavera(with spring vegetables such as peas and asparagus) or with fennel. Risi e bisi too.
- Light seafood salads such as crab or prawn/shrimp salad
- Sushi - it might not be the obvious pairing but it's a good one
Image © ArenaCreative - Fotolia.com

10 great beer and food matches for summer
We all know a beer goes down well with a ploughmans and that it’s a great drink to wash down a barbecue but here are 10 more unusual pairings which should liven up your summer drinking.
Crab and witbier
My own favourite, I confess. Doesn’t matter if the crab is simply dressed or gussied up Thai-style, it works brilliantly though I prefer the Belgian style to the more banana-y Bavarian one with seafood.
Ham and parsley paté with English bitter
Cold ham and English bitter is a classic but this gives the pairing a bit of a twist (and is a great way to use up some leftover ham into the bargain). You simply cut up about 140g of cooked ham (smoked is nice) and whizz it in a food processor until finely chopped. Add an equal amount of unsalted butter and a couple of tablespoons of water, whizz until smooth then season with 1 - 2 tsp of English or Dijon mustard and fold through some finely chopped parsley and chives.
Kebabs and lager
What else do you drink with a kebab? Make your own straight off the barbecue, stuffed into warm pitta bread with lettuce, onion, houmus and a good squeeze of lemon juice and accompany with a good pils or Kolsch.
Prawn, fennel and leek risotto with wheat beer
A summery seafod and herb (dill) risotto which we found went really well with Colomba, a light, aromatic Corsican wheat beer. Would also pair well with a witbier or bière blanche
Joloffe rice and IPA
Joloffe rice is a spicy West-African rice dish that’s a bit like a paella and makes great outdoor eating. I’ve successfully drunk a light English bitter with it but would usually go for an IPA or an amber ale.
Beer-can chicken and amber lager
Yes, you may cook the chicken on a bog standard can of lager but the finished dish deserves something better! With its spicy dry rub and accompanying BBQ sauce or salsa you’ll find it goes really well with a Viennese-style lager or amber ale.
Chicken Caesar salad with a blonde or golden ale
The creamy, tangy sauce makes this much-loved salad a great match with a golden ale or lager such as Duvel or Schiehallion.
Cheesecake and cherry (or raspberry) beer
A fantastic match so long as you top the cheesecake with similar berries to the ones in the beer. (The great thing about matching beer and food is that you can mirror the flavours in the dish. That doesn’t work with wine where the food tends to strip similar flavours out of the wine)
Bakewell tart and raspberry beer
Similar thinking. You pick the fruit flavour - in this case raspberries - out with the beer. If you live in the states there’s a wonderful one called Raspberry Tart from the New Glarus Brewing Co in Wisconsin but Lindemans Framboise will do nicely
Blueberry and peach beer jellies
A bit of a cheat as the beer is actually in the dish rather than paired with it but fruit beers make absolutely knock-out jellies that are perfect for summer desserts (find the recipe here.) Try two or three different kinds such as blueberry and peach beer, raspberry and cherry beer and mango and passionfruit beer - a real showstopper.

Food pairings for wheat beer I: witbiers (bières blanches) and lighter wheat beers
Wheat beers are fabulously flexible when it comes to food matching - the beer world’s equivalent of a crisp white wine.
There are two main styles - the cloudy, citrussy, aromatic Belgian-style witbier (aka bière blanche) and the richer banana-and-clove flavours of German hefeweizen which you can read about here.
In between are a range of wheat beers from different sources which fall somewhere between the two but are basically suited, like witbier, to salads, seafood and dishes flavoured with citrus and herbs
Matches for Northern French and Belgian style witbiers:
Seafood such as crab, mussels, oysters and clams - witbier is great for a beery version of moules marinières
Simply prepared fish like fried or grilled sole or plaice
Smoked salmon or trout
Dim sum and other light Chinese dishes such as stir fries
Sushi
Raw fish such as ceviche and tartares
Fried fish like fish and chips, calamari or whitebait
Seafood pastas and noodles like crab linguine with chilli and coriander or pad thai
Seafood and light vegetable risottos
White pizza or seafood-topped pizza
Spring vegetables such as peas, beans and asparagus - as you can see from this article
Light fresh cheeses such as young goat cheese, sheep cheese and feta. Beer and food matching guru Garret Oliver recommends an omelette with sharp apple and goats cheese
Salads, especially mozzarella basil and tomato salad, Greek salad and caesar salad
Brunch dishes
Potjevleesch - a chunky jellied terrine of pork, chicken and rabbit you find in north-east France
Lighter Thai and Mexican dishes flavoured with citrus and herbs
Thai green curries
Photo ©zavgsg at fotolia.com

Which food to pair with South African chenin blanc
You might think it odd to pick out South African Chenin rather than Chenin Blanc in general but I do think the wines are distinctive, particularly when it comes to the crisper styles which are much zestier than they tend to be in the Loire
It struck me while I was there that food matching with Chenin is quite easy to explain. Treat young, fresh unoaked styles like Sauvignon Blanc - in other words think about seafood and salads and richer, fuller styles in the same way as white burgundy or Viognier.
Here are some suggestions - some of which will, of course, apply to other Chenin Blancs.
Fresh crisp young zesty Chenin Blanc
All kinds of fresh seafood including crab, prawns and, most particularly, oysters
Seafood tartares like tuna tartare or salmon and avocado tartare
In fact, avocado generally
Smoked salmon or trout
Fish and chips
Salt and pepper squid
Fish patés
Sushi
Spring vegetables like asparagus and peas (see this pairing with asparagus mousse at Rust-en-Vrede)
Salads, especially chicken, cheese or ham salads or ones containing apples or pears. Chenin Blanc can handle an element of fruit
Light seafood pasta dishes and risottos
Goats cheese
Medium bodied smooth or old vine Chenin Blanc (made more in the style of an unoaked Chardonnay or a Pinot Blanc) will work with many of the dishes above but also:
Scallops (wonderful with Chenin)
Simply cooked fish dishes
Fishcakes
Cooked egg dishes like quiches, frittatas and omelettes
Onion tart
Mild cheeses like Caerphilly and white-rinded cheeses like Brie so long as they're not too ripe.
Richer, fuller styles more similar to an oaked chardonnay or Viognier:
Almost anything with a creamy sauce - a good fish pie, for example or chicken with a cream and mushroom sauce.
Richer fish dishes such as salmon en croute
Scallops (again)
Lobster
Roast chicken
Roast pork belly, especially with apple sauce
Roast root vegetables such as carrots, parsnips and sweet potatoes
Roast butternut squash
Medium-dry chenins with a touch of sweetness
Can handle spicy food particularly those containing some kind of fruit such as Cape Malay or other mild, fruity curries
Southeast Asian-inspired salads
Gravadlax - Chenin is one of the few wines that can handle that devilishly difficult sweet mustard sauce
Sweet chenin
Always wonderful with apple or pear tarts
Peach and apricot-flavoured desserts like a peach and blueberry cobbler
And try with cheese served with a fruit compote like this white cheddar and spiced apricot compote
Photo © M.Studio - Fotolia.com
Do you have any favourite pairings for Chenin I've missed out?

Some top food pairings for pear cider and perry
Pear cider - also known as perry - has a different taste from apple cider. It’s generally lighter, drier and more fragrant, a better match for delicate ingredients like fish.
You can treat drier styles like a dry white wine, sweeter ones almost like a dessert wine. And sparkling perries like champagne. But cheaper. Good news all round!
Here are some suggestions:
* The drier styles work particularly well with simply cooked fish or fish with a creamy sauce. Avoid strong flavours like tomato and garlic.
* Fried fish like goujons or even fish and chips
* Fishcakes and fish pie
* Fresh crab
* Seared scallops though you might want to go for a medium-dry style
* Mussels in a cream sauce marinière-style but cooked with a medium-dry perry
* Prawn or seafood cocktail or salads (medium dry styles)
* Delicate or gently spiced chicken dishes: roast chicken with tarragon. Creamy chicken pies like this chicken and leek pie. Chicken salads. Chicken terrines (but watch the chutney!)
* Pork dishes with apple or pears like this dish of pork chops with apple, fennel and onion I wrote about earlier this year. And pork sausages of course. But not with onion gravy (too strong)
* English-style cold cuts like ham sliced off the bone, cold roast pork, pork pies, Scotch eggs
* quiches
* Boxing Day leftovers
* Mild cheeses - young goats cheese, Delicate regional cheeses like Caerphilly and Cheshire. Medium sweet styles work well with mellow blue cheeses like Stilton
* Vegetable soups with a touch of sweetness like carrot, pea or leek soups, especially with a little cream
* Fresh-tasting salads with peas, broad beans or fennel
* Sweeter styles, which often have a touch of honey go well with salads with fruit and milder blue cheeses and with simple puddings like a simple apple or pear tart or pannacotta and raspberries as I suggest in the Guardian today.
* Sparkling perry will go with typical party nibbles (especially cheesy and fishy ones) and with midly spiced Indian snacks.
So mild is the word with perry. Treat it gently and stay clear of fierce flavours.
Image © Yevheniia - Fotolia.com
Most popular
.jpg)
My latest book

News and views
.jpg)


