I believe that wine actually does not suit food!
Test: try taking a mouthfull of any food, and a good sip of any wine into your mouth, and taste the combination in your mouth for a moment before swallowing. You can make that test with a wine & food combination you have appreciated earlier, or with a combination some guru has recommended, or just do the test randomly.
My experience is that the result is untastefull.
Furthermore I find that it is more common for food to become less tasty if wine is used in cooking than I would give credit to á-vin-recipes as such. This I say conditionally because there are ways of not subdueing the rich taste of food substances even if wine is used in the kitchen. And in skillful hands, when excesses of wine use is evaded, and the wine is evaporated more, wine can actually be beneficial in cooking.
After these generalities, I'd like to tell about a resent dinner with good, wine-loving friends.
We were having "blue clams" and a not-totally-dry Rietzling for starters.

Photo (c) Hannu Lehmusvuori
The blue clams were cooked with a modicum of dry white plus the usual creme, herbs, etc.
The combination of Rietzling and the clams was harmonious and 'tastier-than-hell'!
After the clams we had 'pork-in-the-oven' as our main course. With a Spanish Syrah - Infinitus 2007.
Again a most pleasing combination.
Following the main meal, we started enjoying some reasonably mature 'white-mould' cheese with the mentioned wines still on the table.
This is where I found the extraordinary disaster. Having first sipped the Rietzling, and then putting a piece of the cheese in my mouth, the 'edel' mould of the cheese tasted like excrement! And I've tasted that cheese before, and found it most pleasant.
When I changed to the Syrah, Infinitus, the rich cheese-mould, and the soft taste of the cheese essence, were lifted in taste to 'great-spheres-of-tastebud-appealing'!
So, have you had such experiences? And how do you take my 'provocation' in the beginning of this comment?
-Hannu