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Posted by: culinarymastermind on 2009-10-11, 21:56:34
Something savory, that's for sure. Anything sweet will make the wine taste atrocious. Ashley doesn't know what she's talking about. Burgundy produces a lot of Pinot Noir wines and they produce many GREAT wines. As for an actual dessert…I don't know, look up savory dessert on google. I looked for ya but wasn't too successful, maybe you'll have better luck. The best advice I can give you? Don't serve either of those with dessert. If you want to impress your date, go buy a couple champagne flutes and a bottle of champagne (actual champagne, not just any sparkling wine, doesn't have to be expensive). The upside of this? What a lot of people don't know is Champagne is meant to go with everything. Seriously, everything! No matter what you make for dessert, the Champagne WILL pair well with it. The sweeter the dessert, the sweeter the Champagne you should buy. On the bottle, sec means sweet and brut means dry. Go for a sec or a demi sec and you shouldn't have to worry about anything. Well, basically any sweet wine would be okay. I tend to think of Pinot Noir and Cabernet Franc as dry wines, but that's partly because when I drink reds, they're just about always dry. Any sweet wine would work. Gamay might work well, it's a lighter wine. Just stay away from the dry wines and try to pair the fruit flavors in the wine with the flavors in your dessert (that is, if you use fruit). To be honest, I'm confused about some of the answers. My question is wouldn't a drier champagne being served with a sweet dessert make the champagne taste too dry (bitter, astringent, etc.)? If you have sweet on your palate and then taste something that is supposed to be sweet, you will perceive it as much less sweet. In other words, take a bite of the sweet dessert, take a drink of champagne, it will taste drier than it would if you were drinking it by itself. Also, if you drink a drier/ spicier wine with dessert to "offset " the sweetness in the dessert, I don't see how you will get much of a balance. The dry wine will be strong and even drier, and the dessert will taste even sweeter than it did before. How does pairing a sweet dessert with a dry wine work? If you look at dessert wines, they are all sweet wines. I'm pretty sure a dry wine with a sweet dessert would not work very well. |