Top pairings

8 great food pairings for stout and porter
Although there are obviously differences between the two types of beer, dark stouts and porters tend to pair with similar types of food. Here are my top matches ...
Oysters and Guinness is one of the beer world’s classic pairings only bettered in my experience by an oyster rarebit. A creamy chowder with oysters and scallops is also great with a lighter stout
Dark beefy or venison stews like my recipe for braised beef with port and porter. Ox cheeks, ox tail all love stouts and porters
Steak pies such as this steak and stilton pie I enjoyed with a London porter or a hot game pie
Boiled bacon and cabbage - a classic St Patrick’s Day pairing with a smooth dark creamy Irish stout. Mmmm.
American-style barbecue especially BBQd ribs or smoked brisket - one for an American-style porter - even a smoked one if you want to layer on some extra smokey flavour.
Stilton and similar mellow blue cheeses - porter works in the same way as port: a strong dark contrast. Brilliant.
Dark chocolate cakes and desserts - If you don’t have a very sweet tooth and enjoy black coffee with your chocolate you’ll enjoy a porter too. A stronger, sweeter imperial stout is arguably better still. Especially with brownies.
Vanilla ice cream - Imperial stout and ice cream makes a great float. Here’s Garrett Oliver’s Imperial Stout Float from the Brooklyn Brewery
If you found this post useful you may also enjoy:
Food pairings for hefeweizen and other German-style wheat beers
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The best food pairings for Carmenère
You may not be familiar with Carmenère but it's a delicious red at this chilly time of year.
It has quite a bit in common with Cabernet Franc from which is apparently descended* though tends to be richer and more plummy like Merlot with which it was originally confused in Chile.
Its green, slightly herbaceous character (not always in evidence in more expensive wines) makes it a surprisingly good match for fish and dishes flavoured with herbs. These would be my top pairings
* Lamb, especially with herbs - salsa verde for example or herb-crusted rack of lamb. I once had a Peruvian dish of lamb with coriander which was sensational with Carmenère. Any lamb curry with herbs would also work well or try middle-eastern style meatballs or minced lamb kebabs with mint and coriander
* Bacon - there’s a smoky edge to Carmenère that works well with dishes that include smoked bacon (think spinach, bacon and blue cheese salad) or with a hearty smoked bacon chop or rib
* Empanadas, especially with green olives
* Dark leafy greens such as kale, chard, savoy cabbage or spring greens
* Roasted or grilled Mediterranean vegetables such as peppers (bell peppers), courgettes (zucchini) and aubergines (eggplant). Chicken or pork cooked with peppers
* Sides of asparagus or green beans
* Chillies - fresh chillies in particular. Try Carmenère with Mexican and, I’m told, Thai food
* Seared tuna - in fact seared seafood generally works.
*There’s a fascinating entry on Carmenère in Jancis Robinson’s Wine Grapes
Photo © Adobe Stock

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.
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The best food pairings for white rioja
White rioja is tricky when it comes to wine pairing as it comes in such contrasting styles. There are the crisp fresh unoaked white riojas which behave much like a sauvignon blanc and much richer barrel-fermented ones which can tackle more intensely-flavoured fish and meat dishes
The latter are more characteristic of the region but even these vary depending on the age of the wine. Young ones behave much like a chardonnay with food, older ones - and white rioja does age magnificently - more like a white Rhône
Here are some of my favourite pairings:
Crisp unoaked white rioja
simply grilled fish and shellfish
garlicky prawns or grilled squid
gazpacho
Spanish-style salads
Barrel-aged white riojas of 2-3 years old
almonds
serrano and other Spanish ham
salt cod dishes such as croquetas
menestra (spring vegetable stew) and other braised vegetable dishes
paella and other rice dishes with saffron
dishes with aioli (garlic mayonnaise)
white asparagus
tortilla and other savoury egg dishes
More mature barrel-aged riojas
rich fish dishes such as roast turbot
hake with garlic and clams
grilled tuna
robust fish stews
grilled lobster and other rich lobster dishes like this experimental dish of lobster and sweetcorn
roast chicken, turkey or guineafowl
sautéed chicken dishes with sherry
chicken or pork dishes with creamy sauces
grilled pork or veal chops
Full-flavoured sheeps cheeses like this rosemary coated ewe’s milk cheese
Also see these excellent suggestions from Vina Tondonia
See also The best food pairings for red rioja

Food pairings for wheat beer II - hefeweizen, dunkelweizen and other German-style wheat beers
German wheat beers are sufficiently different from Belgian wheat beers to merit a separate post - so what are the best food matches for hefeweizen with their striking banana and clove flavours?
Of course some of the same pairings will work but in my view hefeweizen are better with richer, sweeter seafood dishes and pork than witbier. They’re also less spicy so less good with the citrus and herb flavours that work so well with witbiers.
Hefeweizen such as Schneider Weisse and Franziskaner
Weisswurst and pretzels - THE classic south German breakfast pairing
Any kind of cured pork: sausages with potato salad, smokey hams - and the accompanying pickles
Roast chicken or pork
Fried chicken or veal (wiener schnitzel)
Chicken caesar salad
Richer seafood such as scallops and lobster (I’m betting lobster rolls are particularly good)
Hot smoked salmon and sautéed salmon
Chicken-based Tex Mex dishes like burritos
Apple tarts and turnovers
Mark Dredge suggests banana cake and roast banana in his book Craft Beer World. And Saveur comes up with this recipe for banana pudding which I must say I like the look of.
Dunkelweizen
Some of the above pairings will work with the richer, malty flavours of dunkelweizen but I would put more emphasis on:
Smoked ham and bacon
American-style BBQ
Mole (the Mexican dish not a small furry creature)
Fried chicken, veal or pork with a tomato and pepper sauce
Matured cheeses such as Gouda and Parmesan
If you found this article useful take a look at my post on matching witbiers. And there’s a useful article by beer writer Ben McFarland here on matching wheat beers. Quoting yours truly, as it happens . . .
Image by Wolf-Henry Dreblow from Pixabay
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