Straight from the sommelier's toolkit, this handy overview will help you to demystify the sometimes-complicated task of matching food to wine.
The words you need to know
• Taste: the basics – salty, sweet, acidity, bitter and savoury/umami.• Texture: the tactile parts of food and wine such as ‘chewy’ (tannin) and ‘crisp’ (acidity).
• Body: the sum ‘weight’ of a wine or dish’s key parts. Graded in light-bodied, medium-bodied or full-bodied.
• Savoury: food without sweetness or wine with higher levels of astringency.
Prime pairs
• Acid and salt: Think riesling with oysters – a classic.
• Fat and acid: Try hot chips with Champagne. Seriously.
• Protein and tannin: Match your meat to the right pitch of tannin – where weight meets weight.
• Fat and tannin: Not just power – delicate oils (fat) of pink fish suit soft tannins of light red wines.
• Sweet and heat: Just a touch of residual sugar in wine can muffle the burn of chilli.
• Savoury and umami: Look to fried chicken – high in fat and salt – paired with skin-contact whites.
This is an edited extract from the article 'Back to basics' in the latest issue of Halliday magazine. To get the full story, pick up your copy today.
Latest Articles
-
From the tasting team
Mike Bennie on how Queensland’s Granite Belt wine region is shattering assumptions
1 day ago -
From the tasting team
Marcus Ellis shares insights from the latest Alkina Grenache Assembly
1 day ago -
Wine Lists
Eighteen new gold and silver medal wines from Tasmania that you can shop now
23 Oct 2025 -
Wines to try
24 wines for spring that come recommended by the makers themselves
23 Oct 2025