Wines to choose from.. |
Sinophiles who happen to
be wine aficionados always look for suitable libations to match their Beijing
duck, sushi, sashimi and more exotic preparations.
In the last two decades,
considerable efforts were made to find the most suitable wines to match
delectable specialties of Oriental cuisines with wines. By trial and error,
chefs and gastronomes have concluded that Alsatian wines best complement
Oriental specialties.
They are lively
with a pleasant acid backbone, aromatic with pure, unmistakable varietal
character, high enough alcohol to stand up even to “hot” foods, and deeply
flavoured to complement even highly spiced dishes.
Choosing an Alsace
wine for Oriental food is easy, but you need to know that there us a range of
Oriental cuisines, ranging fro mild Japanese to highly flavoured Szechuan, which
happens to be so highly spices and hot that no wine can stand up to it. Beer,
water, and yoghurt mixed with water are the best to combat the incendiary
heat!
Sample of a spicy
Chinese cuisine...spicy stir fried duck with Thai chilies.
Many Asian dishes
are sweeter than European specialties. Asian chefs routinely use more sugar in
their sauces.
The sweetness of a
dish, makes a dry wine, regardless of colour, taste drier. Off-dry wines are
more suitable. Sweet and sour fish or pork, Beijing duck whit hoisin sauce, Thai
lemongrass, Indian coriander, cumin and ginger for best with Tokay Pinot Gris
from Alsace. Italian Pinot Grigio happens to be too light for this
purpose.
Alsatian Riesling,
bone dry or off dry with their racy acidity and full body, are excellent with
sushi and sashimi. Whole fried fish and Shanghai cold cuts can be best matched
with dry, aromatic Rieslings.
Dry Gewurztraminer
wines, long considered the flagship of Alsatian wines, enhance Thai cuisine very
successfully. Gewürztraminer can be dry, late harvest or selectione des grains
nobles (selected late harvest). The last two go better with coconut milk based
Thai desserts.
China is a vast
country with a number of regional cuisines – Beijing, Shanghai, Szechuan,
Hokkien, Hakka and Cantonese. Most Chinese restaurants in North America and
Europe feature Cantonese cuisine. Some a mixture of many Chinese cuisines and
yet a few would feature Szechwan specialties.
Shanghai cuisine
tends to be oily and highly flavoured, due to the tendency of their chefs to
braise rather than stir-fry. Sugar, soy sauce, vinegar, ginger, sesame oil and
rice wine are the seasonings. Steamed crab with vinegar, sugar and ginger sauce,
a specialty, is difficult to match with wine, but late harvest Riesling does the
job.
Tokay Pinto Gris
and Gewürztraminer are good matches for Shanghai specialties. Beijing duck,
eleborate multi-course feast, goes best with Gewürztraminer and Tokay Pinot
Gris.
For Cantonese food,
Pinot Blanc, Riesling and Tokay Pinto Gris are perfect. The main characteristics
of Cantonese cuisine are subtlety and finesse. Varietal, dry wines with good
acidity complement Cantonese cuisine dishes well.
Indonesian and
Malaysian cuisines reflect Dutch Chinese, Indian and Portuguese culinary
influences featuring nutmeg, pepper, cloves, cinnamon, cumin, chiles, coconut
milk, peanuts, shrimp paste and combinations of spices. Here rich
Gewürztraminer, and late harvest Tokay Pinto Gris should be considered the best
choices.
Thai cuisine is one
of the most versatile and interesting Oriental cuisines using coconut milk curry
paste, shallots, garlic, coriander, turmeric, paprika, lemon, lemongrass and
shrimp paste. You cannot go wrong using Gewürztraminer, Riesling, Pinto Blanc or
Pinot Gris with Thai specialties.
Japanese cooking
employs grilling, steaming, frying and boiling. Soya beans play a significant
role in the Japanese cuisine – it is as used as fermented paste (miso); custard
like cake (tofu); and processed to soya sauce that literally replaces sat on the
table. Japanese cooks use salt, pepper, sugar, spring onions, chives, sesame
oil, mild rice vinegar, toasted sesame oil, mirin, wasabe and daikon. Rice is
the main source of starch. For tempura, consider Riesling, Pinot Blanc and Pinot
Gris.
Teppan-Yaki
(grilled meat) i.e. yaki tori (grilled chicken) Pinot Gris or Pinot Blanc are
fine, but more appropriate with grilled squid which Japanese love, and sell on
the street from kiosks.
Do not hesitate to
serve Pinot Gris or Pinot Blanc with shabu-shabu, thinly sliced beef and
vegetables simmered in chicken or beef broth, served with dipping sauces and
garnished with pickles and sesame.
Alsatian wines
represent good value, are full of flavour, crisp, and offer plenty varietal
character. They are versatile and can match all types of foods including
Oriental cuisine, Mediterranean specialties, Italian regional dishes and
Alsatian culinary delights.
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