The Noble Writ: A Pair of Classics, a Classic Pair
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So, first, here's your stress-reliever: There is no "best" match. Yes, some matches may work better for some people. And there are certainly some sure-fire losers, such as serving a dessert wine that is less sweet than the dessert itself -- sour city! -- or matching an extremely tannic wine like a young California cabernet sauvignon with a delicate dish lacking the fat or richness to tame the tannin. However, taste is highly subjective and variable and the notion of absolutes needs to be abandoned.
Even if you manage to hit on a winner of a combination, the odds of you finding it as pleasing the next day, let alone the next month or year, is unlikely. (Though it's also possible you might like it more in the future.) So many factors impact taste and smell: what you ate earlier; smells you encountered (perfumes are particularly crippling); whether you are congested; what your food was stored or cooked near; how a bottle of wine was stored; whether the wine has any subtle faults; etc.
The number of complex, poorly understood circumstances that align to create a taste experience is truly dizzying. So relax. Pick something that seems logical and enjoy both the wine and the food for what they are.
| The Beaujolais region is highlighted. |
While roast chicken is one of the more wine-friendly main courses out there, a good bottle of Beaujolais enjoys a special relationship with it. All red Beaujolais is made from the gamay noir à jus blanc grape, which produces wines that are low in tannin and relatively high in acidity. They pack a ripe, juicy fruit that just begs to be drunk in quantity. Two importers, Kermit Lynch Wines and Louis Dressner Selections, bring in producers who are committed to quality and whose Beaujolais selections are as close to a sure thing as there is in the wine world.























