Pairings | Spaghetti bolognese

Wines to match different pasta sauces
What wine should you pair with your favourite pasta?
As you might guess it depends on the sauce rather than the pasta shape. From rich and meaty ragùs to zesty herby pesto, each sauce has its own unique character that suggests a different wine pairing. That said I like to pair Italian wine with pasta wherever possible as it suits it so well and isn’t too full-bodied or alcoholic.
In this guide, I’ll walk you through the best wine pairings for six popular styles of pasta sauce, from the classic tomato-based marinara to creamy Alfredo and beyond. Each sauce calls for a different approach: think crisp whites to cut through the richness of a carbonara, or a bold red to stand up to a hearty Bolognese.
What Wine to Match with Different Pasta Sauces
Creamy pasta sauces
To offset creamy sauces (eg carbonara or fettucine alfredo) think Soave, Bianco di Custoza, Pinot Bianco, Sicilian whites and lighter Chardonnay or Chardonnay blends.

See also six of the best wine matches for spaghetti carbonara
With baby vegetables (primavera) or herbs (verdura): try a crisper Italian whites such as Falanghina, Vermentino or Arneis. Or a Loire Sauvignon Blanc.With mushroom pastas serve Soave, Bianco di Custoza, Lugana or Chardonnay, or a light Merlot or Pinot Noir.
Seafood pasta sauces
Seafood (spaghetti alle vongole, spaghetti with mussels, linguine with crab) need crisp dry whites such as Frascati, Verdicchio, Vernaccia di San Gimignano, Muscadet or Picpoul de Pinet. Crab or lobster sauces can take a fuller white such as a good quality Soave or Chardonnay.
The best wine pairings for spaghetti alle vongole
Photo by tofuprod licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0
Red or tomato-based pasta sauces
Tomato-based sauces include fresh tomato with basil: crisp dry whites such as Pinot Grigio or Verdicchio.
Cooked tomato sauces such as napoletana or marinara): Montepulciano d’Abruzzo or a light Sicilian red.
Meat-based sauces e.g. bolognese, spaghetti with meatballs, sausage-based sauces are a logical partner for Sicilian and Puglian reds (especially Primitivo), Sangiovese, Rosso di Montalcino and inexpensive Barberas. Zinfandel is good too.
Six of the best matches for spaghetti bolognese
Pesto and other cheese-based sauces
Dry whites such as Gavi, Soave or Verdicchio are best with green pesto - you could also try Sicilian whites and lighter Chardonnays).
With red pesto I’d go for a medium bodied red such as Montepulciano d’Abruzzo, Sangiovese or Merlot. It’s a colour thing as much as anything
With cheese-based sauces such as four cheese and Gorgonzola): try crisp dry whites such as Verdicchio, light Chardonnays or light reds such as Teroldego or Merlot.
Spicy pasta sauces
With hot spicy sauces such as arrabbiatta, aglio olio e peperoncino (garlic, oil and chilli) and puttanesca (anchovies, capers and olives) try either a sharply flavoured dry white wine or a rustic Italian red: a Primitivo or Sicilian red or a Zinfandel
The best wine pairings for spaghetti puttanesca
Photo by being0828 licensed under CC BY-ND 2.0
Pasta sauces with pulses
Tuscan reds such as Chianti work well with pasta with beans or lentils (Pasta e Fagioli) or try an earthy, neutral white such as Orvieto or Vernaccia di San Gimignano)Top image by Brent Hofacker at shutterstock.com

The best food pairings for Chianti Classico and other Tuscan sangiovese (updated)
There’s a lot of talk about how the wines of a region tend to match its food but that seems truer of Tuscany than almost anywhere else.
The traditional reds of the region - almost all based on sangiovese - work so effortlessly well that the locals barely bother with anything else, drinking them right through the meal (well up to the point they switch to vin santo …)
Because of its marked acidity, particularly when young, Chianti pairs brilliantly with tomato sauces, pizza and pasta bakes such as lasagne but it’s also a great wine with a simple grill or roast or even (gasp!) a burger. Here are my favourite pairings:
Inexpensive or youthful Chianti Classico

Paccheri con ragù chiantigiano e funghi porcini
Crostini, especially topped with mushrooms or chicken livers
Pasta with a meat or tomato sauce e.g. ragu bolognese, spaghetti and meatballs and even meatloaf
Baked pasta dishes such as lasagne
Pizza
Grilled cheese sandwiches
Bean or chickpea soup
Dishes with rosemary and fried sage
Dishes with salsa verde - even fish like this roast cod dish
Salumi especially salami with fennel
Pecorino cheese
Tuscan olive oils
Aged or ‘riserva’ Chianti Classico
Roast lamb with rosemary and garlic
Roast or braised veal, especially with mushrooms
Peposo - beef cooked with Chianti and pepper
Tuscan-style sausages and beans
Game, especially rabbit, pheasant and wild boar
Burgers (surprisingly, maybe but think of the tomatoes and cheese … )
Top level Gran Selezione Chianti Classico
Similar dishes to the above though the Italians would tend to go for steak such as a Bistecca alla Fiorentina.
See also What type of food pairs with Brunello di Montalcino?
Top photo © Emiliano Migliorucci at fotolia.com

6 of the best pairings for spaghetti bolognese
Given the arguments about how to make a bolognese sauce it’s hardly surprising there should be a difference of opinion about what wine to serve with spaghetti bolognese but here’s what I would go for:
Best red wines with spaghetti bolognese
* a medium-bodied Italian red such as an inexpensive Chianti, Montepulciano d’Abruzzo or a simple Sicilian red. It’s the acidity in Italian reds that makes them so refreshing
* Italian grape varieties such as barbera and sangiovese made elsewhere
* inexpensive Languedoc or Roussillon reds
* Zinfandel. Always good with tomato-based pasta sauces
Can you drink white wine with a bolognese sauce?
Absolutely especially if the sauce is made with white wine or includes milk like Anna del Conte's ragu then you’ll find it will work really well. I suggest a dry Italian white such as Verdicchio.
What about beer with bolognese?
Maybe another surprise but if you use beer rather than wine to make your bolognese sauce and include bacon and a little smoked pimenton for a smoky note you’ll find it’s a terrific pairing. Try a Belgian-style blonde ale or an amber ale.
Note: these drinks will work with other pasta dishes served with a bolognese sauce. It’s the sauce you match not the pasta shape.
For wine pairings with other pasta sauces see

What food to pair with Malbec
Malbec has become so popular it may have become one of your favourite red wines but what are the best kind of dishes to pair with it?
Given most of the bottles we see come from Argentina, steak might seem the obvious answer but there are lots of other dishes it would work with too. In the Cahors region of south-west France for example it might well be paired with a cassoulet.
Generally it’s a full-bodied, generous wine which goes well with meat-based dishes but suits grilled and roasted vegetables too. It can also handle a bit of spice - try it with a chilli con carne or a kebab
Food pairings with malbec
Young, fruity malbecs
*Smoky cured beef
*Beef empanadas
*Charcuterie, especially flavourful terrines
*Chilli con carne
*Spaghetti and meatballs
*Spaghetti bolognese (made British/American-style rather than a classic Italian ragu)
*Pasta with blue cheese sauce and broccoli (as you can see from this Match of the Week)
*Fajitas
*Beef burritos
*Burgers (OK, that’s steak, I know!)
*Medium hot lamb curries like rogan josh
*Kebabs
*Roast or grilled aubergine
*Dishes with beetroot such as a salad of smoked eel, beetroot and horseradish.
Heavyweight malbecs (more expensive, full-bodied malbecs of 14%+)
*Steak, obviously and . . .
*Roast beef or venison
*Barbecued lamb, beef or pork - it particularly suits smokey, chilli-based rubs
*Lamb tagines with prunes
*Beef teppanyaki
*Steak and hot game pies
*Aubergine bakes
*Farmhouse cheddar
*Dark chocolate (a controversial one, this but some people argue that a ripe lush Malbec works well with a chocolate dessert. Not totally convinced myself.)
More rustic styles of malbec such as Cahors and Cot
*7 hour braised leg of lamb
*Lamb shanks
*Braised beef stews or shortribs especially with smoked bacon (Malbec’s also a good wine to add to a stew)
*Pot roast pheasant
*Duck confit
*Cassoulet and other pork and bean dishes
*Flavoursome sausages with garlic e.g. Toulouse sausages
*Cheeseboards (barring lighter cheeses like goats cheese and stinkier ones like Epoisses. As Evan Goldstein points out in his excellent book Daring Pairings, Malbec works surprisingly well with more mellow blues like Barkham Blue or Stilton - though not, I think, with Roquefort)
See also 10 Argentinian wine pairings that don’t involve steak
Most popular
.jpg)
My latest book

News and views
.jpg)


