Match of the week

 Cacio e pepe and Frappato

Cacio e pepe and Frappato

I’ve never known quite what wine to pair with cacio e pepe, the fashionable pasta dish that’s just based on cheese (usually pecorino) and cracked pepper.

It’s not creamy like a carbonara but it is very (deliciously) cheesy and the pepper adds a spicy hit that would fight with anything tannic.

I’ve drunk English sparkling wine with it when it was paired with fried chicken but I think that was more about the chicken than the pasta and could have gone down the white wine route. The dish originally comes from Rome so I could have drunk a Frascati if I’d been able to get hold of decent one.

I was thinking along the lines of a light red like a Valpolicella but Francesco at my local Italian deli, Divino in Bristol, where I buy my pici (the thick spaghetti-like pasta you need for cacio e pepe) suggested a light juicy Sicilian Frappato (the Sibiliana Roceno 2018) which went perfectly. You seem to be able to buy it online from Alivini (for £9.19 a bottle plus delivery) though they’re normally a trade supplier, I believe.

By the way cacio e pepe is really easy to make if you want to try it at home - Felicity Cloake gives a recipe in her excellent The Perfect series. Be warned though: it is addictive!

Braised saltmarsh lamb at Langford Fivehead

Braised saltmarsh lamb at Langford Fivehead

I’ve just had a sneak preview of a very lush new B & B Langford Fivehead which opens next week (March 1st) in the Somerset Levels just outside Taunton. The building dates back to 1453 and is owned and run by former BBC Good Food editor Orlando Murrin and his partner Peter Steggall

At weekends they will also be providing supper in their splendidly baronial candlelit dining room (right). Following on from the pattern they established at their previous restaurant with rooms Le Manoir de Reynaudes in south-west France, Orlando cooks a no choice menu, country-house style, and Peter sources and pairs the wines.

This was my favourite of the matches though all were good. The meat was shoulder and leg of hogget which is year-old lamb, sourced from the Quantocks near the Somerset coast, slowly braised and served with mash and spiced Russian kale (a particularly hardy variety - just as well this winter.) It had a gorgeous, slightly gamey flavour which was perfectly offset by a dark, dusky Sicilian red Azienda Agricola Ceuso 2005, a blend of Nero d’Avola, Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot.

I was also impressed how well the wine went with a selection of cheeses including King’s Favourite a washed-rind cheese from Dorset producer Cranborne Chase and a Welsh blue called Perl Las from Caws Cenarth - not always easy with a red.

We started with a lovely salad of smoked eel, duck egg and hazelnuts which Peter paired with a Domaine Mas Saint Laurent Picpoul de Pinet but then I know I’m always banging on about smoked eel . . .

*Incidentally - and nothing to do with food and wine matching - the house has an Aeolian harp, a box strung with harp strings that resonate in the wind and emit curious and mystical sounds. Worth going for that alone . . .

I stayed at Langford Fivehead as Orlando and Peter’s guest. Photograph by Steve Dalton.

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