Match of the week

Wine with cheese: Gorgonzola and Vin Santo
You know that port goes with Stilton, right? Well, here’s another good variation on the pair-sweet-wines-with-blue-cheese rule: a glass of Vin Santo and a creamy Gorgonzola.
I tried it out at a Waitrose tasting the other day when I came across a Vin Santo from their range - the Antinori Santa Cristina 2008* - which was quite woody and complex and crying out for food of some sort. Conveniently there was a cheese board in the lunch room next door so I tried it out with a couple.
It didn’t match with the Epoisses but was really good with the gooey Gorgonzola - a pairing you could easily repeat at home. Late harvest Muscats also work well.
If you were serving the Gorgonzola with figs as a cheese course you could also try a sweet red wine like a Recioto della Valpolicella or a Maury from southern France. A dry white or rosé with a touch of sweetness would work if it was the starter or entrée. Try a Malvasia.
Some favour Barolo with Gorgonzola but I’m never totally convinced about the combination of blue cheese and dry red wine except when the cheese is used on a pizza, flatbread or in a baked pasta dish.
* A new addition which doesn't seem to have hit the shelves yet but which will be priced at £11.99 a half bottle. You could obviously try the combination with other vin santos.

Figs, blue cheese and Maury
We’ve been feasting on figs from our neighbours' fig tree in Grau d’Agde down in the Languedoc this weekend - all the more satisfying as I gather that back home Waitrose is currently selling them at 99p each.
Mostly we’ve just been eating them as they are: freshly pulled off the tree they need little adornment but I did try them with some thinly sliced bread and a decadently gooey cream cheese I discovered called Cancoillotte which was pretty good.
The dream combination though I think would be a ‘tartine’ or crostino smothered with some soft blue cheese - maybe Fourme d’Ambert, maybe Gorgonzola dolce - topped with a sliced or quartered fresh fig, a trickle of pomegranate molasses and a small chilled glass of Maury, the port-like sweet red wine from the Roussillon. Late summer bliss.
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