Holiday Wine Pairing by Richard Kinssies

Turkey, the bird of choice for most American holiday tables, is one of the most amiable of foods when it comes to pairing it with wines. By keeping in mind a very short list of caveats almost any wine will do. The side dishes are another issue but they can be easy to work around. Here are some tips.

Minimum of oak and alcohol - Turkey, and most food for that matter, doesn’t do well with wines that show lots of oak or alcohol so avoid those big muscular tooth-staining reds.

Red or White? - Well, that depends on one’s preference for white meat or dark meat. The lean white *** meat goes best with white wines while the rich fatty dark thigh meat can stand up to a hearty red. Most people will have a bit of each so I suggest setting the table with two glasses and having bottles of both red and white on the table. Guests can pour what they like. As for myself, I have wine in both my red and white glass.

Drink what you like - This is the cardinal rule of matching wines with food. It seems so obvious, but we often get so caught up in being enologically correct that we lose sight of it.

Beware of sugar and acid - Some side dishes can ruin any wine. The main culprits at the holidays are those containing lots of sugar and acid such as sweetened sweet potatoes and especially those very sweet and very acidic cranberry dishes. The solution is simply to avoid putting wine and these foods in you mouth at the same time.

What to drink? - Washington, with its almost 400 wineries, has such a wide array of types and styles there is plenty to choose from. Here are some ideas but please don’t be limited by this list.

Red - Cabernet Franc is a grape that can give us wines with good structure and a nice tart berry fruit. Lemberger is the little grape that could. It can be fruity, spicy and rustic at the same time, which can work very well with turkey. Pinot Noir is considered one of the best choices for the holidays and now Washington has some pretty good efforts, especially from some Chelan area wineries.

White - Viognier is being offered as the white partner to the syrah grape and there are some very good Washington examples. Its pear and peach aromas and flavors are its appeal. Dry Riesling and even not so dry Riesling can work very well with the white *** meat – and even some of those side dishes.

Bon Appetite and Happy Holidays!

From JUICE, The Latest on Washington Wine Country, November 2005

Richard Kinssies, owner of the recently opened Wine Outlet in the SoDo district of Seattle, has been a wine journalist since 1976 and the wine columnist for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer since 1982. He is a feature writer for The Wine News, a national wine publication and the author of Seattle Epicure, a book on dining in Seattle and The Art of Wine Tasting, an illustrated guidebook.

Kinssies, an experienced wine educator, is the director of the Seattle Wine School, which he founded in 1981. He created a wine curriculum for the Seattle Central Community College’s Culinary Academy and a wine professional certification program for the Washington Wine Commission. He has also been retained by the French government to educate the local wine trade on the wines of France.

Richard has worked as a sommelier, and owned and operated a highly acclaimed Seattle restaurant and wine bar. He has traveled extensively to all the major wine regions of the world and is frequently a judge at national and international competitions.

Published 14-11-2005 12:29 by washwine []
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