I usually shy away from Cabs when choosing a dinner wine, unless we were pulling a steak off the grill that is. I am not sure why, if it’s a bias I have because of its reputation or if I am concerned it would over power whatever I just spent hours creating or I did not feel the meal warrants a wine that is usually one of the pricier in the collection. I do not shy away from it when out tasting, and we often purchase a few as well, but then they just sit there waiting for the “perfect meal”. Recently, however, we were out with friends and purchased a bottle to drink with our meal. It happened rather quickly and I was not able to give my input and before I knew it we had a bottle of Cab at our table and I had just ordered Mahi-mahi. Great, I thought, now I am not going to be able to enjoy my meal because the wine will totally dominate the fish, and I probably will not even like it that much. Much to my surprise they paired wonderfully. Since then I have paired Cabs with several other non-traditional Cab dishes. I have been intrigued that these big wines can become chameleons and pair with many dishes with very subtle flavors without losing any of their own appeal. They are not the bully I thought they were. I guess I have a little bit of a cab crush now. Try it out for yourself and I think you will be surprised how a Cab can stand up to just about any big flavor yet not overpower some of the more subtle flavors. Let me know what you come up with.
Tag Archives: Food and Wine Pairing
Doc and Troya Dinner Night 3/13
After working like crazy before our departure, and then spending a week on
vacation,Troya and
I could not wait to have a dinner night at home. We both love dinner nights at home when we get to make one of our favorite recipes or try something new and pair it with something in our wine cooler. Since we had done Caribbean food for a whole week we were looking for something different. None of our favorites were jumping out so we looked through some of our cook books and found a recipe for an Afghani lamb and spinach stew served over a middle eastern rice pilaf with dried fruit and pine nuts with a cold cucumber and yogurt soup on the side. A perfect blend of spice and sweet we thought. Now to pick the wine. I thought a Spanish style varietal would go great with these flavors and found an 09 En Garde Tempranillo from the Livermore, CA area. On its own this wine had great flavors with coffee and dark chocolate jumping to the front. It paired beautifully with the meal, becoming smooth and mellow but not lost or over bearing with all the flavors. Good to be back.