| Sweet and sour wines for sweet and sour meals |
| Written by Paula Goddard |
| Monday, 23 January 2012 00:00 |
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Open any bottle of German Riesling, Müller-Thurgau or Gewürztraminer (literally the 'spicy traminer') and your nose is assaulted with honey, elderflower, pineapple and Cheshire cheese aromas. Overpowering for many, such a complex mix can easily swamp the delicate scents of lighter vegetarian Chinese dishes. For these a better choice is wine made from the Pinot grape. Pinot Noir is grown in Germany but their typically chilly summers don't allow this red grape to ripen properly, but lighter-skinned Pinots need less sun to ripen and so do well. The nutty, almost champagne-like, flavours of German Pinot Grigio (Primus £6.29 Waitrose, d:Vine Asda £5.48) suit chow mein and braised vegetable meal combinations as well as smoked fish recipes and quiches. PG Wine Tips for Chinese Food£5.99 and underThere are a few fruity, slurpable wines among the forgettable masses.Les Crouzes French Colombard 2010 £5.39 Co-op Light grapefruit, melon and peach flavours. Great for chicken stir fries without too much chilli. Wombarra Australian Shiraz Rosé £5.99 Co-op A light red-coloured and lightly flavoured rosé: sweet strawberry, redcurrant and milk chocolate. Costs a bit more, but tastes greatSometimes a bottle of wine tastes so fab it's still a bargain whatever it costs.Asda Extra Special South African Chenin Blanc 2010 £6.97 Asda An oomphy aromatic white with banana, melon and apple flavours. Match to sweet and sour dishes or chow mein. Asda Extra Special French Viognier 2010 £6.97 Asda Almost like a perry with its Brazil nut and pear flavours. Refreshing. Turning Leaf Californian Pinot Grigio 2010 £7.46 Sainsbury’s Tastes like the syrup from a tin of pineapple chunks. Turning Leaf Californian Pinot Noir 2009 £7.79 Waitrose A red Pinot this time and quite a Marmitey tasting one - plus cherry, raspberry, redcurrant and cocoa. Match to beef dishes. This article has also appeared as Paula's Wines of the Week on MatureTimes.co.uk |
Received wisdom says the naturally sweet-sour flavours of German white wines work best with Chinese food. Which helps with the food-wine matching for this evening’s celebration of the Chinese New Year, but really any wine you like will match, but a bit of sweetness helps.
The slightly sweet strawberry and milk chocolate flavours of Wombarra’s Shiraz rosé (
