Hartford Courant

Pairing food, wine is an adventure, not a chore

- By Eric Asimov The New York Times

Pairing food and wine is one of the great culinary pleasures, whether you are opening a bottle for a romantic dinner by candleligh­t or having a glass with a bag of potato chips. But it can also be one of the most mystifying and intimidati­ng elements of planning a meal.

What ought to be a joy often produces a feeling of dread and the fear of making mistakes. That anxiety can set in for both occasional wine drinkers and regular consumers.

To allay the fears of an embarrassi­ng failure, many people will look for recommenda­tions or turn to books about the art of pairing food and wine.

It makes sense to seek advice from more experience­d people, except that advice is often uncomforta­bly specific, implying that only one bottle can do the trick, or mind-bogglingly complicate­d. It can be wrapped in a formulaic approach directed at foodand-wine profession­als that promises success but requires more knowledge about the chemistry of food and wine than most people possess.

Over many years of recommendi­ng wines with recipes and opening bottles with meals, my primary mode of consuming wine, I have come to believe several essential truths about pairing wine and food. These truths may not promise success, but I hope they help to ease the fears of selecting wines.

Give yourself a break: The first step, especially if you are relatively new to wine, is to get some welcome help. How? Buy your wine at a good wine shop rather than a supermarke­t or big box store. Not only will this step improve the general quality of the wine you drink, it will make available to you some good sources of advice.

Dedicated merchants know a lot about wine and are almost always eager to help. Tell them what you are planning to eat and ask for recommenda­tions.

That’s an easy way to begin, and will lead to some good pairings. It’s an insurance policy when you really need help, and it will give you a set of ideas to work with in the future. But to develop your own instincts, you’ll need to start making decisions yourself, owning the triumphs, risking setbacks and building a well of experience.

Perfection is not the goal: Wine and food go together like two beautiful harmonizin­g voices, creating a blend that outshines either of the individual deliveries. This is the ideal, at least. It rarely works out that way.

Most food and wine pairings are not perfect. But even if a bottle and a dish do not meld synergisti­cally, they can still enhance one another.

The simpler the recipe, that is, the fewer the ingredient­s, the easier it is to find that harmony. Even so, pairings are subjective and often depend on individual psychology rather than chemistry between a food and beverage.

For example, I do not like to drink Champagne with oysters. I find the combinatio­n creates a metallic taste and prefer Chablis or Muscadet. But try telling that to the many people who love the two together, or to the scientists who say they have demonstrat­ed why the pairing works so well.

Many people assume every dish has its perfect match, the one wine that, with a particular recipe, will make magic. The simpler the dish, the greater the range of possibilit­ies. Sure, you can enjoy a Napa Valley cabernet sauvignon with a steak.

You could also enjoy a

Bordeaux, a Burgundy, a Chianti Classico, a zinfandel or a Rioja Reserva, just to name a few options.

Let experience be your guide: The basic premise behind my column is that the more bottles you try of more different sorts of wine, the better you will understand your own taste. And the better you know your preference­s, the easier it becomes to make your own choices rather than rely on help from experts.

This is doubly true of pairing wine and food. Those sommeliers recommendi­ng the best bottle with the chef ’s rendition of halibut with ginger and caramelize­d fennel? They weren’t born with that knowledge. It came through years of trial and error.

For example, a colleague asked me what white wines I would choose with dishes that we ordinarily serve with red wines, like pizza, pasta with cooked tomato sauce or steak. My answer: I’m not sure. Try a white wine you like and see what you think.

Years ago in Germany, a winemaker demonstrat­ed what he considered a wonderful pairing: a 20-year-old riesling auslese with a steak. It was a delicious combinatio­n. The richness of the wine’s texture was intact after 20 years, though most of the sweetness had faded into an umami quality that went unexpected­ly well with the beef.

With wine and food, rules are made to be broken.

It’s hard to go wrong: This is critical to understand. If you’ve chosen a wine that you like with a dish you enjoy but they do not harmonize beautifull­y, how bad is that, really? You are left with good food and good wine, and you can savor both individual­ly.

Even more important, it’s an opportunit­y to learn and to build on what you know. You will have had an experience that you will retain far longer than some advice you might have read.

So-called mistakes are beneficial and integral to gaining experience and learning. They are to be embraced rather than feared. Another colleague asked me, what type of wine would go with an acidic dish like panzanella, a Tuscan salad made with stale bread and fresh tomatoes?

I know from experience that fresh tomatoes tend to go best with crisp white wines. Many Italian whites would be terrific, though the wines in this case don’t have to be Italian. Aligoté from Burgundy and Sancerre would be delicious. But could you drink a red with this? Sure.

Almost never is one wine the correct and only choice. You do not have to worry about choosing the perfect bottle because many bottles are the right choice and very few are wrong.

Maintain standards, but temper expectatio­ns:

The pursuit of the perfect should never be the enemy of the good. We all love and remember peak experience­s, but not every pairing is memorable, though it may have been good enough.

By good enough, I mean the wine and food didn’t step on one another. It’s rare that food and wine will actually clash, but it does happen. If something off-key occurs, so long as you haven’t spent a fortune on the wine or opened a fragile bottle, chalk it up to experience and open a different bottle.

Nobody wants to feel that they have wasted money. But experience does not come free. You have gained perspectiv­e at the cost of a bottle, which you can put in the fridge and drink the next night in a more appropriat­e context.

 ?? ELLICE WEAVER/THE NEW YORK TIMES ??
ELLICE WEAVER/THE NEW YORK TIMES
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