Match of the week

My best wine (and other) pairings of 2017
Those of you who visit the site regularly will be aware I post a regular match of the week - the most interesting wine - or other drink - pairing I’ve come across in the past 7 days.
Well this is the pick of that selection - the most inspiring, intriguing and memorable pairings of 2017
Black coffee and cardamom buns
2017 was the year I really got into coffee, finally realising there was more to life than a double espresso. This pairing was from back in January when I was playing with my new Nespresso machine (before I got into my V60 dripper). Anyway - coffee and cake - tick. Coffee and cardamom buns (from Meera Sodha's Fresh India). Double tick. Coffee and cardamom rocks
Beetroot cured salmon with Furmint
Furmint has been my big wine discovery this year - as flexible with different kinds of food as Austria’s Grüner Veltlner. At Corrigans in Mayfair I drank it with a starter of beetroot-cured salmon and horseradish cream and it sailed through. Try it in 2018
I got a bit obsessed with these squid ink noodles at Taverna Uvedoble when I visited Malaga back in February. And was surprised to find how well it went with a Rueda, a crisp Spanish white wine I’ve never rated much in the past but which suddenly seems to have undergone a real improvement in quality. Loved it.
Yorkshire curd tart with builders tea ice cream and Shire Highland Black Tea from Malawi
I love finding good non-wine pairings and was really thrilled with this match at the (then) newly opened Lorne in Victoria - particularly with a builders tea ice-cream. Clever and witty.
March saw my first trip to India and a first real opportunity to try Indian wines with the local food. This marinated roast lamb dish which was served at the International Vine and Food Experience at the Taj Falaknuma Palace in Hyderabad was in fact extraordinarily wine-friendly and the Grover Chêne - a blend of tempranillo and shiraz - a perfect match.
Salmon with shellfish sauce and aged semillon
It was then on to Australia’s Hunter Valley to immerse myself in aged semillon. I wouldn’t have necessarily thought a mature vintage would go with a comparatively rich dish like this but Keith Tulloch’s 2009 totally hit the spot.
Spiced whitebait with sriracha and Chinon rose
Back to the UK I dropped into one of my favourite Bristol restaurants Box E for a glass of rosé and they brought out a little snack of spiced whitebait with sriracha to go with it. Proof again that rosé can handle spicy food
Milk fed lamb with Bolgheri Coronato
I don’t look to Italy as often as I should do for great wines but this pairing with a 2011 Bolgheri Coronato at Marianne’s in Notting Hill was absolutely stellar. Can’t really go wrong with lamb, though.
Maple syrup square with Neige Noir Ambré
Surprisingly the standout pairing of my trip to Montreal back in June - I say surprising because there were so much other great food and wine but I loved this fabulous combination of Canada’s answer to sticky toffee pudding with Neige Noir Ambré, a delicious rich apple-based digestif at Le Filet.
We all know that Krug goes with luxury ingredients such as lobster and caviar but who knew it could be set off so perfectly by brioche? Well, the folks at Krug obviously did and shared the discovery with us at the Krug Festival preview back in June. Krug for breakfast? Don’t mind if I do.
Egg, chips, truffles and Cava gran reserva
One of three truffle pairings on this list, I realise (the others being black truffle pizza and Puligny Montrachet and Louis Roederer brut with a truffle cheese toastie just before Christmas at Fortnum & Mason) It was hard to choose between them but I think this combination of eggs, chips and truffles (huevos rotos) with Cava producer Juve & Camps ‘Gran’ gran reserva at Boca Grande in Barcelona back in July. (Get the message: truffles and vintage bubbly - and white burgundy - is a stellar pairing)
Oysters and dry German riesling
Riesling isn’t my automatic go to with oysters but I loved this combination with a 2014 Schloss Marienlay from Reichsgraf von Kesselstatt at Magpie in London back in August. The reason? The oysters were topped with diced apple and chicharron (pork crackling), both riesling-friendly ingredients.
Another wine highlight of the year was San Sebastian’s fresh spritzy Txacoli with the local anchovies (the best I’ve ever tasted). You can find them in bars all over the city - these were from Bar Antonio. A real terroir-based match.
Margaux and Turkish chicken with a walnut sauce
Margaux is a wine you’d more often think of pairing with lamb or beef than chicken but the intensely flavoured walnut sauce really kicked the match into touch. Mature Margaux though, note (2005)
Orange or skin contact wine has become increasingly popular and goes surprisingly well with strong flavours. We had this Ribolla at Peckham Bazaar last month and it went beautifully with all their eastern Mediterranean-inspired dishes, particularly the octopus. Expect to see more on wine lists in 2018.
Alcester gold cheese and honey with Sainte Croix du Mont
Red wine and port are still more associated with cheese than white or sweet wine but sometimes a dessert wine is the best match, especially if the cheese is served - as this washed rind one was at Wilsons in Bristol - with honey. (Truffle honey, note. Am clearly a bit obsessed with truffles)
And the final pairing of the year. Early landed cognac with Christmas pudding. Christmas pud and brandy is of course a tried and tested combination but this took it to another level.
So here’s to many great new pairings in 2018 - do subscribe to my newsletter if you want to hear about them as soon as they’re posted - and let me know of any that have wowed you. A very happy new year to you all!

My 12 best drink pairings of 2014
In my annual round-up of the best matches of the year I usually end up listing around a third of my matches of the week so I thought this year I’d set myself the the challenge of picking one from each calendar month.
Of course that suffers from the drawback that some months have more than their fair share of good pairings but you can always trawl through the rest if you feel inspired.
Looking back through 2014 I see that as usual I’ve picked a lot of seafood pairings - maybe because meat matches are more obvious. And - unusually for me - a fair number of desserts. But although a lot of my drinking comes from France - only two make the final 12.
January - Grilled tuna tart and Camus Ile de Ré double matured cognac.
The standout pairing from a cognac lunch that was part of the 2014 International Cognac Summit. The cognac, which had a slightly salty edge, was served frozen (i.e. ice cold rather than solid). A real show-stopping start to the meal. (You can also find the cognac and cheese pairings our group came up with here.)
February - Chocolate marmalade slump cake and tokaji
A dessert I made for friends inspired by a new batch of homemade marmalade. The Tokaji was a 2002 Kiralyudvar 6 Puttonyos and the recipe came from Lucas Hollweg’s marvellous Good Things to Eat. Dark chocolate and orange - what's not to like?
March - Sweetbreads morels and madeira
Served as a small plate by one of my favourite local restaurants Bell’s Diner which is a good plan as sweetbreads are incredibly rich. The madeira - a chiled 5 y.o. Barbeito rainwater - handled the dish perfectly

April - Fruit and flower tart with German auslese riesling
This dessert at the Ledbury was certainly the prettiest of the year but the match with a Keller Dalsheimer Hubacker Riesling Auslese 2004 from the Rheinhessen was as spectacular
May - 40 day aged fillet of black angus beef with Henschke’s 2010 Mount Edelstone Shiraz
No, not rocket science but sometimes you can’t beat the classics - and a welcome reminder (at a wine dinner at Allium in Bath) just what a good buy the Mount Edelstone Shiraz is.
June - Crème brûlée and carthagène
You don’t expect to find a great wine and food pairing (or even anything edible) at a trade show but Foncalieu had the inspiration to show a selection of their wines with canapés devised by Cyrus Todiwala of which these saffron and cardamom tarts and carthagène - a sweet liqueur - was the standout combo. I also managed to twist his arm to give me the recipe which you can make without the pastry cases if you prefer
July - Cherry and pistachio cake and Sweet Agnes riesling
Yet another dessert from the wonderful Honey & Co cookbook which I paired with a Seifried Late Harvest riesling from New Zealand. (There’ll be lots more New Zealand pairings coming up as I’m heading there next month for the first time since 2000. Whoo hoo!)
August - Veal chops and Eben Sadie Sequillo red
August is a bit of an odd month unless you’re on holiday but I had a great lunch with the guys at Bordeaux Index at Hix Oyster and Chop House in Farringdon. I was expecting them to order Bordeaux but they picked this cracking 2011 vintage from one of my favourite South African producers Eben Sadie. Again, classic.

September - Salmon uri with spicy ginger beer
I’m always pleased to find an inspiring alcohol-free pairing and this one - at the newly opened Palomar in Soho - proved you don’t necessarily need wine to hit the heights. A reminder that it’s time I went back there
October - Currywurst and pils
THE pairing, obviously, if you go to Berlin as we did for the first time this year but why knock it? What else would you drink with currywurst? Ace!
November - Scallop and mango ceviche and Montes cherub rosé
I admit the location had something to do with this. Nothing beats tasting a wine in the vineyard the grapes come from. Especially at sunset. But the combination of the sharp/sweet ceviche and strong fruity rosé was terrific anyway you look at it.
December - Smoking Goat fish sauce wings and Peter Lauer ‘Fass 16’ dry riesling The third riesling pairing of the line-up. Sublime spicy wings from one of the hippest restaurants in town and a glass of classy German riesling. Can’t beat it.
The best match? Has to be the tuna tart and cognac. I wrote back in January “If I come across a more clever or imaginative pairing this year I’ll be lucky” and, indeed, nothing beat it.
And my wine of the year? Gotta be riesling which has to be one of the most food-friendly wines on the planet. See other pairings here and here.
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