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AHHHHH ... CHAMPAGNE

"Pairing Food and Champagne"
by Jennifer Sergent
Scripps Howard News Service
Most champagnes are a blend of chardonnay and
pinot noir grapes, from across several vintages.
Like any wine, champagnes range from sweet
to dry. Here are the labels to look for:
- Demi-sec: The sweetest of champagnes, but not as sweet as
a dessert wine. It means "half sweet."
- Dry: A shade drier than demi-sec.
- Extra Dry: one step drier.
- Brut: the driest form and the most popular. There are some
special categories, which tend to be more expensive than the traditional
champagne blend:
Blanc de Blancs -- made only
with Chardonnay grapes. It generally goes well with lighter foods, such
as seafood and vegetables. Also good as a pre-dinner aperitif.
Blanc de Noirs -- made solely from red Pinot
Noir and Pinot Meunier grapes, with a deeper golden color than the blanc
de blancs. It makes a great pairing with full-flavored foods, such as
meat and cheese. These champagnes tend to be rare ... and expensive.
- Rose: The color comes from the addition of Pinot Noir wine
at the second fermentation, the point at which still wine becomes champagne.
This type is one of the best to have with dinner, according to Ed McCarthy,
author of "Champagne for Dummies."
(Source:
"Champagne for Dummies,"
by Ed McCarthy, John Wiley & Sons, $16.99)
Experts and amateurs agree. Champagne is much
more versatile than any single wine to drink with a wide array of foods,
beyond the predictable pairings with caviar and oysters on the half shell.
The following food pairings are recommended for traditional brut champagnes,
unless otherwise noted:
- Scrambled eggs
- Any mushroom dish
- Nuts, especially almonds
- Popcorn and potato chips
- Cheese. The best are aged, hard cheeses such as parmesan, gouda or
cheddar. Goat cheese goes very well with blanc de blancs.
- Any pasta or risotto, especially with cream or mushroom sauce. Avoid
heavy tomato-based sauces. The tomatoes clash with the high acidity
of the champagne.
- Pizza, with thin crust, easy on the tomato sauce.
- Vegetables.
- Fish and seafood, especially lobster.
- Poultry and game birds such as duck. Rose is a particularly good pairing
with these meats.
- Other white meats, such as veal, pork, ham and lamb. Lamb that is
slightly pink in the middle and ham go very well with rose.
- Deep fried foods, such as fried chicken, french fries or calamari,
for the same reason beer goes well with these foods.
- Asian food. The acidity of champagne stands up very well to the spiciness
of these foods. A light brut or extra-dry is ideal, but not a very dry
brut. Ask your wine merchant for advice.
- Sushi is best for the driest bruts or blanc de blancs.
- Mexican food is good with fruity extra-dry champagne.
- Dessert that isn't very sweet, such as berries, shortbread, pound
cake, angel food cake, or tart, lemony desserts, are appropriate for
demi sec. Chocolate is OK with an extra-dry or demi sec, if it's dark
or bittersweet and not gooey. An Italian asti is better for desserts,
because it's sweeter than French champagne.
Champagne & Sparkling - Dom Perignon, Veuve Clicquot -- you name it,
Wine.com has it! Stock up for all your holiday parties. |