The Star Early Edition

WHY YOU SHOULD BE PAIRING CHEESE WITH TEA

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IF EXISTING opinion is anything to go by, cheese and wine go together like tea and cake, champagne and strawberri­es and, well, cheese and wine.

But as Brangelina have showed us, even the most establishe­d pairings can come tumbling down. Could it be that wine isn’t actually the best liquid to consume alongside your cheeseboar­d? Is there a drink out there that brings out cheese’s best qualities, well, better?

According to one “food and drink luminary”, we should actually all start pairing cheese with tea.

“Most people, in my experience, think of tea as a drink for rainy days, grandmas, or as a little sister to coffee,” Rachel Safko told Forbes. “All of the above can be true, but there’s much more versatilit­y to tea – it’s the chameleon of beverages.”

New York-based Safko offers private events and consultati­ons, including a “tea and cheese soirée” devoted to exploring “the flavours that are unlocked when pairing tea and cheese”.

She believes tea is underrated and under-explored as there are so many different types with different qualities, and there’s a tea for every mood and occasion.

“Whiskey lovers might start with Puerh or Lapsang Souchong,” she suggests. “Pairing tea and cheese is a leap of faith from there.

“It comes from seeing tea as a drink with real personalit­y, oomph and flavour, and from feeling its many moods rather than just seeing it as a dull, old-fashioned afterthoug­ht.”

Safko believes tea could take the place of wine because they’re both affected by nature – where the grapes or tea leaves are grown, the soil and how the wine and tea are processed.

“Like wine, teas have varying degrees of tannin along with a natural astringenc­y: a dryness and feeling that isn’t quite bitter or sour, but more like the pleasant tartness and pucker you might get from tasting a lemon or pomegranat­e,” she explains. “Cheese – in its infinite glory – offers a nice balance to that astringenc­y.”

She goes so far as to argue that tea is superior to wine as the heat draws out flavours that a cold drink can’t.

So how should you pair your tea and cheese?

Safko recommends “a crisp, lemony first flush Darjeeling – known as the Champagne of tea” with Brie and cucumber finger sandwiches. The classic combinatio­n works so well, she says, because “the fatty, creamy umami that most of us go bonkers for in cheese helps round out the bite of more astringent teas”.

Just like when choosing a wine for your cheese, you could either choose a tea to contrast salty and sweet, or go for a flavour similar to the cheese.

If you have your go-to cheese and wine pairings, Safko says it’s easy to swop out your vino with teas – try light green and white teas instead of bubblies and sauvignon blancs.

“Green teas, in general, tend to go really well with fresh goat cheeses or triple-crème cheeses,” she says. “The crisp, bright, vegetal, elegant quality of a Japanese Sencha, for example, complement­s a classic goat cheese.

“If you want something stronger, this is where black teas and Puerhs come in. The smoky Lapsang Souchong or velvety Keemun are both dynamite with blue cheeses.”

So if you’re trying to cut back on your alcohol consumptio­n but aren’t quite ready to give up cheese, perhaps it’s time for tea. – Independen­t

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