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Can you match wine and chillies?
Who better to turn to than the Aussies for advice on pairing wines with a wide range of spicy Asian food? Here's another preview of the food and wine matching sessions at the Melbourne Food Festival - Solving the Eternal Chilli Dilemma. Answers from Neil Prentice of Moondarra Wines and chef Benjamin Cooper of Chin Chin.
Q So what should we be thinking about in wine terms when we're matching wines to chilli?
NP "I am always primarily conscious of avoiding a clash between tannin and chilli. Though my Koh Samui friends love to point out that locals only ever drink beer (bitter) or Black tea (bitter/tannic) with their food."
BC "I tend to go with something that has a reasonable residual sugar level and lower alcohol levels. (The sugar tends to mellow the chilli heat) . You want something that is happy to play second fiddle rather than fighting for attention.
A good acid structure also makes pairing easier eg a good Sauvignon Blanc."
Q Can you give some examples of the styles of wines that work best with individual hot dishes?
BC "Riesling, Gewurtztraminer, Sav Blanc, Pinot Gris/Grigio, Pinot Noir.
The sweeter whites work really well with things like jungle curry or som tum (papaya salad) while the pinot will go with a red duck curry or rare beef salad."
NP "The sherbet /sweet/sour of riesling harmonises with the combination of spice and seafood.
The viscosity and mouthfeel of Pinot Gris is great friend of spicy pork.
The classic combination of duck and Pinot Noir transcends cultures by crossing wonderfully from French cuisine to Thai."

Q And some of the ones that don't hit it off so well?
NP "To my mind bordeaux/cabernet is a clash because of the chilli/tannin conflict. So while Bordeaux is the most "digestible" of wines I don't think it has empathy for highly spiced dishes."
BC "I don’t really enjoy chardonnay and spicy curries together
Big heavy reds and wines with high alcohol content are slightly more challenging to pair with Asian food. For example a big shiraz and massaman curry for me doesn’t work so well. I find it leaves the palate all a bit overpowered. The high alcohol also igniting the chilli further."
Q Are there other ingredients/sides you can bring to the party that makes a pairing more likely to work?
BC "Definitely - for instance the duck and pinot thing
Tomatoes help to bring the chilli and wine together
Proteins definitely help. The classic meat and red wine pairing or seafood and white
Herbs can help to bridge the flavour profiles as well
Chocolate also helps eg chocolate moles in Mexican cuisine"
NP "A little sweetness in Riesling, Pinot Gris or Chenin Blanc can enhance aromatic herbs like coriander and also be a beautiful foil for both the fire of chilli and pungency of fish sauce."
Q Surprise me with a match I'd never think would work and tell me why it did.
NP "Pinot Noir with spicy seafood can work - a red curry of soft shell crab for instance. The glycerol in Pinot Noir has empathy for red chilli and breaks the seafood/red wine rule. A slightly sweet riesling an be a wonderful match with a Massaman Curry - breaking the preconceived rules of beef and white wine."
BC "Pinot noir and stir fried mussels in tomato and chilli jam.
Seafood is traditionally a white wine food but the tomatoes and the smokey wok and chilli heat really work well with the pinot."
The Melbourne Food Festival starts this Friday and runs until March 17th.
You can find Benjamin Cooper's top Melbourne food tips here. And Neil's article on Wagyu and wine (he also rears Wagyu cattle)

Will Studd's tips for matching cheese and wine
Those of you who are lucky enough to live in Oz have the enticing prospect of the Melbourne Food & Wine Festival coming up next month - a two week extravaganza of feasts, workshops and tastings with some of the country's top foodies and wine experts.
I thought the rest of you who, like me, are shivering in the Northern hemisphere (will the weather EVER warm up?) might like the chance to vicariously enjoy a couple of the sessions in the 'Perfect Match', a weekend of seminars on food and wine pairing.
First, I put a few questions to cheese expert Will Studd of Cheese Slices who is hosting a wine and cheese seminar with Steve Flamsteed of Giant Steps/Innocent Bystander in the Yarra Valley.
So, Will, what should we be thinking about in wine terms when we're matching cheese?
Cheese and wine matching is all about taste and texture and is usually based on finding a complementary or contrasting balance of flavours and textures. There are no firm rules and you can have a lot fun trying the myriad of possible combinations but the starting point is always to look for similarities of character and strength.
Can you give some examples of the styles of wines that work best with individual cheeses?
Goat’s milk cheeses are extraordinarily versatile in matching with wine. The lingering, creamy flavours of a fresh goat cheese go particularly well with sparkling wines or fresh, crisp whites such as Sauvignon Blanc with a dry finish. Pinot Gris is particularly good with creamy surface-ripened goat cheeses matured under a wrinkled geotrichum rind, while semi-hard and mature goat cheeses are more at home with juicy, fruity reds with soft tannins such as Pinot Noir and Merlot and even robust aged reds.
And some of the ones that don't hit it off so well?
Regrettably countless bottles of expensive red wine are ritually wasted on cheese matching, perhaps because cheese is often served at a time in the meal when red wine is still on the table. This is particularly the case in Australia where red wines often contain a lot of tannin. This astringent substance is a natural enemy to the creamy, lactic flavours of many locally soft surface mould-ripened cheeses and blue mould-ripened cheeses which tend to be high in fat leading to nasty bitter, angular, hollow, metallic or even mousy flavours.
Are there other ingredients/sides you can bring to the party that makes a pairing more likely to work?
Light sourdough bread or crispy baguette are the ideal accompaniments with cheese - bread, wine and cheese are the holy trinity in France.
Apples are great for cleansing the palate when tasting different types of cheese. There's an old adage which says ‘Buy on apples and sell on cheese', the idea being that, while apple cleanses and sharpens the palate, the fatty coating of cheese can easily hide imperfections in wine. By offering potential customers cheese when they were tasting wine, a wine merchant could make the wine seem smoother and richer than it really was.
Surprise me with a match I'd never think would work and tell me why it does
2 year old Cravero Parmigiano Reggiano is a great companion with an Australian sparkling burgundy (not sure you're allowed to call it that these days, Will ;-)
The effervescent sparkling acidity of the wine slices through the fine crumbly texture of this hard cooked cheese emphasising both the condensed caramel sweetness and the heady perfume in the wine.
Will Studd and Steve Flamsteed's The Classic Wine and Cheese is on at 10am-11.15am on Saturday March 9th. Lucky you if you can get there . . .
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