Food and Wine Pairing - Perfect Pairings Pairing Featured Matches

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Food and Wine Pairing - Events

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The LocalWineEvents.com calendar of food and wine pairing events is where all the world's food, wine, beer and spirits events are listed in one place.

Boston Wine Expo

January 23-24, 2010 Boston, MA The most exciting line-up of industry experts are coming to Boston to host this year's seminars at the Boston Wine Expo.

ZAP's 19th Annual Zinfindel Festival

January 28 - 30, 2010 1 - 4 pm San Francisco, California Zinfandel Festival is an internationally recognized series of tastings that are the premier single-varietal events in the world. With an estimated 275 wineries and 10,000 attendees.

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Read about what's happening with food and wine pairing. Learn about wine chocolate pairing, cheese wine pairing, turkey and wine pairing.


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  • Wine Chocolate Pairing

    Thursday, February 14th, 2008

    As we approach Valentine’s Day, thoughts turn to wine and chocolate. Well, ok maybe we think of other things as well, but we do think about giving chocolates. Wouldn’t it be great to give chocolates and experience it with a wonderful wine?

    Wine chocolate pairing is not easy. The general rule with all pairings is the wine should be sweeter than the food, and this applies to chocolate as well. Otherwise the taste will be sour and the finish will be unpleasant. We usually think of Champagne or a Red. But so does everyone else and it seems outdated. Plus the bubbles get in your nose and the red can really ruin the whole experience since there are more bad matches then good ones.

    You can’t go wrong with a dessert wine or port with fruity flavors high with residule sugars. If you don’t like sweet wines, Cabernets are a great alternative because a lot of them have a hint of cocoa, along with blackberries and spices. Make sure you don’t grab an oakey Cabernet though as you will be disappointed. The oak doesn’t work well with the sweetness of the chocolate and makes a bad match.

    Don’t forget too that there isn’t just one type of chocolate. Dark, white, milk and semi-sweet chocolates all have different characteristics and require a wine that stands on it’s own to the chocolate. A full bodied Zinfandel might work well with dark chocolates while an orange fortified muscat could work well with white chocolates. There is no science to wine paring and the fun is in the experimentation.

    Tips for Successfully Pairings Wines with Chocolate
    Tip #1: The wine needs to be at least as sweet, if not a sweeter, than the chocolate you are having. Otherwise, the taste may quickly turn towards sour

    Tip #2: Match lighter, more elegant flavored chocolates with lighter-bodied wines and the stronger the chocolate, the more full-bodied the wine should be. For example, a bittersweet chocolate pairs well with an intense California Zinfandel.

    Tip #3: If you are experimenting with several varities of chocolates, work from light to dark. Start with a more subtle white chocolate and end on a dark or bittersweet chocolate.

    White Chocolate Wine Suggestions
    White chocolate tends to be more mellow and buttery in flavor, making it an ideal candidate for a Sherry, a Moscato d'Asti, or an Orange Muscat. The Sherry and Moscato d’Asti will pick up the creaminess of the chocolates and the Orange Muscat will pick up any fruit tones present.

    Milk Chocolate Wine Suggestions
    Pinot Noir or a lighter-bodied Merlot will complement a bar of milk chocolate, a creamy chocolate mousse or chocolate accented cheesecake. Rieslings (like Chateau St Jean), Muscats or dessert wines tend to hold up well to mild milk chocolates.

    Dark Chocolate Wine Suggestions
    Dark or bittersweet chocolates need a wine that offers a roasted, slightly bitter flavor itself, with perhaps a hint of its own chocolate notes. Cabs and Zinfandels have a history of perfecting the dark chocolate match, resulting in an unparalleled tasting combination. A Cabernet Sauvignon (try Beringers Port)or a Zinfandel will more than fill your chocolate pairing expectations.

    So for Valentines Day go out and buy some chocolates, and a few bottles of wine, and see what works. If nothing else you’ll be eating chocolate and drinking wine. Now that’s a perfect pairing!

    Boxed Chocolate Collection

    Chocolate and Sex

    Try these recipes:
    Ridiculously Good Chocolate Cookies
    Triple-Chocolate Mousse Torte
    Or search on CHOCOLATE in the search box above.



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