Moderators: Jenise, Robin Garr, David M. Bueker
Sue Courtney wrote:b. matches for the sweeter Germanic style.
Otto Nieminen wrote:Sue Courtney wrote:b. matches for the sweeter Germanic style.
Prosciutto or other cured meats might work? I at least enjoy them, but food and wine pairings can be very personal so I wonder if others enjoy this too?
-O-(who enjoys curry and Nebbiolo...)
Steve Slatcher
Wine guru
1047
Sat Aug 19, 2006 11:51 am
Manchester, England
Sue Courtney wrote:b. matches for the sweeter Germanic style
Tim York wrote:Sweeter Riesling - a real problem which explains why I have more than 150 bottles of German wine from various vintages and excellent producers which I rarely open. I have heard from some producers that they go very well with oriental food, Japanese, Chinese and even Thai, but I eat oriental very rarely and have never risked the combination fearing that Riesling's elegant subtlety would be overwhelmed, particularly by the Thai. I am keen to read any advice you get here.
Otto Nieminen wrote:Sue Courtney wrote:b. matches for the sweeter Germanic style.
Prosciutto or other cured meats might work? I at least enjoy them, but food and wine pairings can be very personal so I wonder if others enjoy this too?
-O-(who enjoys curry and Nebbiolo...)
Dan Donahue wrote:I like off-dry Riesling and spicy Thai, maybe some spring rolls with a tangy sauce would work.
Nathan Smyth wrote:There are no foods which do not match with Riesling.
None.
This is a fundamental, eternal, immutable law of the universe.
Tim York wrote:Dry Riesling is no problem - anything fishy except the most pungent, e.g. oysters which call for something less aromatic.
Sweeter Riesling - a real problem which explains why I have more than 150 bottles of German wine from various vintages and excellent producers which I rarely open. I have heard from some producers that they go very well with oriental food, Japanese, Chinese and even Thai, but I eat oriental very rarely and have never risked the combination fearing that Riesling's elegant subtlety would be overwhelmed, particularly by the Thai. I am keen to read any advice you get here.
Thomas wrote:I agree about the prosciutto.
I find that with sweeter Riesling--and I don't mean as sweet as late harvested--smoked foods, salty foods, foods with some heat, and balsamic vinegar (and only balsamic--maybe balsamic fig vinegar is even better) do the trick.
Sue Courtney wrote:Um .... um .... but don't you find some foods match better than others? Any favourites?
steve.slatcher wrote:Sue Courtney wrote:b. matches for the sweeter Germanic style
Anything that will go with fruit or fruit-based sauces should work. Ham has already been mentioned. Also pork and duck. I'd add hard cheeses to that list too.
Hot-smoked salmon and an just off-dry Alsace Riesling (Rolly Gassman) has been one ofmy favourite pairings.
Dale Williams
Compassionate Connoisseur
11757
Tue Mar 21, 2006 4:32 pm
Dobbs Ferry, NY (NYC metro)
Mark Lipton wrote:Sue, you've already received some good advice. I have my own doubts about matching foods to very sweet (e.g. BA, TBA and Eiswein) Rieslings, though I know of others who feel quite differently, but off-dry and semi-sweet Rieslings are amazingly versatile with food. A lot of Asian-inflected cooking goes well, so how about Thai fish cakes or chinese-style BBQ ribs, a traditional gambas al ajillo, ebi shu mai, cha siu bao, fresh fruits, some sharp cheeses?
Mark Lipton wrote:Sue Courtney wrote:Um .... um .... but don't you find some foods match better than others? Any favourites?
Sue, you've already received some good advice. I have my own doubts about matching foods to very sweet (e.g. BA, TBA and Eiswein) Rieslings, though I know of others who feel quite differently, but off-dry and semi-sweet Rieslings are amazingly versatile with food. A lot of Asian-inflected cooking goes well, so how about Thai fish cakes or chinese-style BBQ ribs, a traditional gambas al ajillo, ebi shu mai, cha siu bao, fresh fruits, some sharp cheeses? Salmon with Riesling is also a favorite of mine, but not easily made into finger food, unless you get some smoked salmon for service on bread or crackers.
Mark Lipton
James Roscoe
Chat Prince
11057
Wed Mar 22, 2006 6:43 pm
D.C. Metro Area - Maryland
Sue Courtney wrote:Thomas wrote:I agree about the prosciutto.
I find that with sweeter Riesling--and I don't mean as sweet as late harvested--smoked foods, salty foods, foods with some heat, and balsamic vinegar (and only balsamic--maybe balsamic fig vinegar is even better) do the trick.
how would you serve this as finger food, Thomas? The sweetest wine is a Spatlese, so lots of acidity to balance the sugar.
Dale Williams wrote:Pretty good list there. And with earlier posters mentioning salty food.
We did a German Riesling tasting last month, some of the successful matches were:
Thai chicken curry in papadum
shrimp with alfalfa sprouts wrapped in diakon
king crab stuffed mushrooms
crisp thin latkes with apple-braised pork with an apple shallot sauce
lobster-mango spring rolls.
As to the dry Rieslings, how do you make choucroute a finger food?
Dale Williams
Compassionate Connoisseur
11757
Tue Mar 21, 2006 4:32 pm
Dobbs Ferry, NY (NYC metro)
Sue Courtney wrote:A lot of Asian-inflected cooking goes well, so how about Thai fish cakes or chinese-style BBQ ribs, a traditional gambas al ajillo, ebi shu mai, cha siu bao
No idea what a gamba is - or those other foreign language suggestions.
James Roscoe wrote:We drink a lot of qba riesling with chicken casseroles of various sorts. We drink riesling with roasted chicken. We drink riesling with crab dishes. We drink riesling with shrimb. Well, you get the idea. It's not meant to be hard.
JC (NC)
Lifelong Learner
6679
Mon Mar 27, 2006 12:23 pm
Fayetteville, NC
Dale Williams wrote:Sue Courtney wrote:A lot of Asian-inflected cooking goes well, so how about Thai fish cakes or chinese-style BBQ ribs, a traditional gambas al ajillo, ebi shu mai, cha siu bao
No idea what a gamba is - or those other foreign language suggestions.
I'm not Mark, but gambas al ajillo are shrimp in garlic, classic tapas. Ebi shumai are shrimp dumplings. Cha siu is Chinese BBQ Pork, I assume bao are the filled buns.
Users browsing this forum: AhrefsBot, Apple Bot, ByteSpider, ClaudeBot, Google AgentMatch, td bot and 0 guests