Unique Wine & Spirits Experiences

Brought To You

How to Pair Wine With Food: The Rules That Actually Work

Pair Wine With Food

Most wine pairing advice makes the same mistake: it gives you a list of matches without explaining why they work. Memorizing that Pinot Noir goes with salmon is useful only if you happen to be eating salmon. Understanding why it works — the structural logic behind it — lets you figure out the right wine for anything on your plate.

There are four principles that cover the vast majority of situations. Once you have them, you don’t need a chart.


The Four Principles of Wine Pairing

1. Match Weight to Weight

The most important rule in wine pairing is body matching: light food with light wine, rich food with rich wine.

A delicate piece of steamed sole with a glass of Barolo? The wine obliterates the fish — all you taste is tannin and dark fruit. The same sole with Muscadet or Vermentino? The wine complements without competing. The food is still the point.

In practice, this means:

  • Light dishes (salads, raw fish, light pasta, vegetable dishes) → light-to-medium white wines or light reds
  • Medium-weight dishes (roast chicken, grilled pork, mushroom risotto, salmon) → medium-bodied whites or lighter reds
  • Rich, heavy dishes (braised short ribs, lamb stew, aged hard cheese) → full-bodied reds with tannin structure

This rule alone handles most situations. When in doubt, think about the heaviness of the dish and match accordingly.


2. Acid Is Your Best Friend

High-acid wines are the most food-friendly wines in the world. Acidity in wine does the same thing that lemon juice does in cooking — it cuts through fat, brightens flavors, and refreshes the palate so you want another bite.

This is why Italian wines work so brilliantly with Italian food. Chianti Classico (high acid, moderate tannin) next to a plate of pasta with meat sauce: the acid slices through the fat of the meat, the tannins bind to the protein, and the wine and food become more than the sum of their parts.

The high-acid wines to know:

  • Whites: Sauvignon Blanc, Riesling, Pinot Grigio, Muscadet, Albariño, Verdicchio
  • Reds: Sangiovese (Chianti), Barbera, Pinot Noir, Gamay (Beaujolais)

High-acid wines are also the right call when your dish has acidity built in — tomato sauce, vinaigrette, citrus-based dishes. The pairing principle: the wine should have at least as much acidity as the food, or the food will make the wine taste flat.


3. Tannin Needs Protein and Fat

Tannins are the gripping, drying compounds in red wine — what you feel on your gums after a sip of Cabernet Sauvignon. On their own, high-tannin wines can feel harsh and dry. Paired with protein and fat, something chemical happens: the tannins bind to the proteins, soften, and the combination becomes silky and satisfying.

This is why a ribeye with Cabernet Sauvignon is one of the great food-wine pairings in existence. The fat in the meat tames the tannins; the tannins structure the richness of the meat. Both taste better than they would alone.

The flip side: pair a tannic red with delicate fish or a light salad and you get a dry, bitter clash. The tannins have nothing to bind to and they dominate unpleasantly.

High-tannin reds need: Red meat, lamb, game, aged hard cheese, duck confit, slow-cooked stews

Avoid pairing tannic reds with: Delicate fish, vegetable dishes, acidic foods (the acid amplifies the drying sensation of tannins)


4. Sweet Wine, Sweeter Food

This is the rule most people get backwards. When pairing wine with dessert, the wine must be at least as sweet as — ideally sweeter than — the food. If the food is sweeter than the wine, the wine tastes thin, sharp, and acidic by comparison.

A dry Champagne with a chocolate mousse: the chocolate makes the wine taste sour. A Sauternes or a late-harvest Riesling with the same chocolate mousse: the wine holds its own, the sweetness levels match, and you get complexity on top of richness.

For dessert and sweet dishes:

  • Chocolate → Port, sweet Shiraz, Banyuls (a sweet red from southern France)
  • Fruit-based desserts → Moscato d’Asti, late-harvest Riesling, Sauternes
  • Crème brûlée / custard → Sauternes, Vouvray moelleux
  • Cheese course (the end of the meal) → works better with dry wines than sweet ones, unless the cheese is very sweet (like Roquefort with Sauternes)

Wine Pairing for the Foods You Actually Eat

Chicken and Poultry

Chicken is endlessly versatile, which means the wine pairing depends almost entirely on how it’s cooked and what it’s cooked with.

  • Roast chicken (simple, herby): Unoaked or lightly oaked Chardonnay, white Burgundy, Pinot Gris, Côtes du Rhône rouge
  • Grilled chicken with lemon and olive oil: Albariño, Vermentino, Gavi
  • Chicken in cream sauce: Fuller white — oaked Chardonnay, Viognier, white Burgundy
  • Chicken tikka masala (spiced): Off-dry Riesling, Gewürztraminer, Pinot Gris (Alsace)
  • Duck (rich, fatty): Pinot Noir, Grenache-based reds, aged Rioja

Fish and Seafood

The old rule “white wine with fish” is mostly right, but the details matter:

  • Oysters: Muscadet sur lie, dry Champagne, Chablis — something mineral and briny
  • Grilled white fish (sole, sea bass, halibut): Sauvignon Blanc, Pinot Grigio, Albariño, Vermentino
  • Salmon (oily, rich): Pinot Noir (the classic exception to white-with-fish), unoaked Chardonnay, dry Riesling
  • Shrimp and scallops: Sauvignon Blanc, Verdicchio, dry rosé
  • Tuna (meaty, steak-like): Pinot Noir, Provence rosé, lighter reds
  • Lobster with butter: Rich Chardonnay, white Burgundy — the richness of the wine matches the richness of the dish
  • Fish tacos / ceviche: Vinho Verde, Albariño, dry sparkling wine

Red Meat

This is where tannic reds find their purpose:

  • Ribeye / grilled steak: Cabernet Sauvignon, Malbec, Syrah — the classic pairing, and for good reason
  • Lamb: Rioja, Grenache-based reds, Côtes du Rhône — lamb’s sweetness plays well with slightly earthy, fruit-forward reds
  • Burgers: Malbec, Zinfandel, Petite Sirah — bold, generous wines that match the intensity
  • Slow-braised short ribs / beef stew: Barolo, Amarone, aged Bordeaux — the long cooking softens the meat and calls for a wine with similar depth
  • Steak tartare (raw, delicate): Lighter — Pinot Noir, Gamay, Côte de Nuits-Villages — the rawness is more delicate than grilled

Pasta

The sauce determines the wine, not the pasta shape:

  • Tomato-based (marinara, arrabbiata, amatriciana): Chianti, Sangiovese, Montepulciano — the acidity matches the tomato
  • Cream-based (carbonara, Alfredo): Unoaked Chardonnay, Pinot Grigio, Soave — the wine’s freshness cuts the richness
  • Olive oil and garlic (aglio e olio): Vermentino, Verdicchio, Albariño
  • Pesto: Vermentino, Gavi, lighter whites — herbs in the pesto echo herbal notes in the wine
  • Bolognese (slow-cooked meat sauce): Sangiovese, Barbera, Montepulciano d’Abruzzo — high-acid reds that handle both fat and tomato

Cheese

Wine and cheese is more nuanced than most people think — the combination doesn’t automatically work just because both are present.

The useful pairings:

  • Fresh cheese (mozzarella, burrata, chèvre): Light, crisp whites — Sauvignon Blanc, Pinot Grigio, Vinho Verde
  • Soft, creamy (Brie, Camembert): Champagne or sparkling wine (the bubbles and acid cut the fat), or light Chardonnay
  • Semi-hard (Gruyère, Comté, Manchego): Medium whites or lighter reds — white Burgundy, Pinot Noir, Rioja
  • Hard, aged (Parmigiano, aged Cheddar, Pecorino): Structured reds with tannin — Barolo, Cabernet, Rioja Reserva
  • Blue cheese (Roquefort, Gorgonzola, Stilton): Sauternes, Port, late-harvest Riesling — the salt of blue cheese craves sweetness

Spicy Food

Spice amplifies the perception of alcohol and tannins — which is why a tannic, high-alcohol red with a Thai curry can feel like drinking fire. The right answer for spicy food is almost always lower alcohol, residual sweetness, and high acidity:

  • Thai, Vietnamese, Sichuan: Off-dry Riesling, Gewürztraminer, Pinot Gris (Alsace)
  • Indian (curry-based): Off-dry Riesling, Viognier, dry rosé — never big tannic reds
  • Mexican (tacos, salsas): Albariño, Vinho Verde, dry rosé, unoaked Garnacha
  • Sushi and Japanese: Dry sake (obviously), but also Pinot Gris, Chablis, dry Riesling

The underlying logic: residual sweetness cools the heat; high acid refreshes; low tannins avoid the amplification problem.


Vegetables and Plant-Based Dishes

Vegetables were once considered the enemy of wine pairing. That reputation is outdated — the variety and intensity of vegetable-based cooking today covers an enormous range:

  • Grilled/roasted vegetables (asparagus, artichokes, Brussels sprouts): Sauvignon Blanc or Grüner Veltliner — the herbal, peppery quality handles the bitterness of these vegetables
  • Mushroom dishes: Pinot Noir, Burgundy, earthy reds — mushrooms have umami that echoes the savory character of earth-forward reds
  • Tomato-based (gazpacho, caprese): Sauvignon Blanc, dry rosé, Sangiovese
  • Rich vegetarian (butternut squash, root vegetables): Viognier, Pinot Gris, fuller whites
  • Lentils and legumes: Medium reds — Côtes du Rhône, Grenache, Barbera

The Regional Pairing Shortcut

One of the most reliable pairing shortcuts that exists: pair the wine with the cuisine from the same region. This works because wine and food from the same region have co-evolved over centuries to work together.

  • Italian wine → Italian food (almost always works)
  • Alsatian wine → Alsatian food (choucroute, tarte flambée)
  • Provence rosé → Provençal food (ratatouille, fish, salad Niçoise)
  • Spanish wine → Spanish food (Rioja with lamb, Albariño with seafood)
  • German Riesling → German food (pork, sauerkraut, charcuterie)

This doesn’t mean you’re stuck — it means you have a reliable anchor when you’re unsure.


Five Rules for When You’re Unsure

When you’re at a restaurant, choosing for a table, or just staring at two bottles and don’t know which to open:

  1. When in doubt, drink sparkling. Champagne and good sparkling wine pair with almost everything — the bubbles and acidity are endlessly flexible.
  2. Rosé is never wrong for a mixed table — especially Provence rosé, which is dry, food-friendly, and works across fish, chicken, vegetable dishes, and charcuterie.
  3. A wine that’s too light for the food is better than one that’s too heavy. You can always pour another glass of something light. A wine that’s too bold for the dish kills the food.
  4. If the dish has lemon or vinegar, make sure the wine has at least as much acidity. No flat wine with acidic food.
  5. Drink what you like. The pairing principles are real and worth knowing, but the best wine with any meal is a wine you enjoy. This isn’t chemistry class.

The Wine Pairing Cheat Sheet

Food First choice Also works
Oysters Muscadet, Chablis Dry Champagne
Grilled white fish Albariño, Sauvignon Blanc Vermentino, Pinot Grigio
Salmon Pinot Noir, unoaked Chardonnay Dry rosé
Roast chicken Chardonnay, Pinot Gris Côtes du Rhône
Steak / lamb Cabernet Sauvignon, Malbec Syrah, Rioja
Pasta (tomato) Chianti, Sangiovese Barbera, Montepulciano
Pasta (cream) Chardonnay, Pinot Grigio Soave, Verdicchio
Soft cheese Champagne, Chardonnay Light Pinot Noir
Blue cheese Sauternes, Port Late-harvest Riesling
Chocolate dessert Port, Banyuls Sweet Shiraz
Spicy food Off-dry Riesling Gewürztraminer, dry rosé
Sushi Chablis, Pinot Gris Dry Riesling, dry sake

Ready to go deeper? Read our guides on wine body — light, medium, and bold reds explained and how to host a wine tasting. For pairing practice with a group, see how wine tasting works as team building.


Explore Further

For the gold standard visual reference on wine pairing, Wine Folly’s pairing guide is the clearest chart available. For pairing research by specific grape or region, Wine Enthusiast’s pairing section covers hundreds of specific combinations with editor recommendations.

Share

Quiz-time

You might also enjoy

How to Pair Wine With Food: The Rules That Actually Work

You might also enjoy

Wine 101- The Fascinating Chianti, Chianti Wine
Chianti Wine Guide: Classico, Riserva & What to Buy

Chianti has a complicated reputation. For decades, it meant cheap wine in a straw-covered bottle — the kind of fiasco flask that ended up as a candle holder. That era left a mark. But the wine made in Tuscany under the Chianti name today is, in many cases, exceptional — and understanding the differe

Wine 101 The Fascinating Rioja, Rioja Wine
Rioja Wine Guide: Varieties, Aging & Best Bottles

Rioja wine is Spain’s most celebrated red, and once you understand how it works, you’ll never look at a Spanish wine list the same way again. It comes from a landlocked region in northern Spain, straddled between the Pyrenees and the Cantabrian Mountains — a geography that creates unusually stable g

Hacks to Store Wine, How to Store Wine
How to Store Wine: Temperature, Position & More

Most wine never gets the chance to age poorly — it gets drunk within 48 hours of purchase. But for the bottles you’re setting aside, whether for a few weeks or several years, understanding how to store wine correctly is the difference between a wine that’s better than the day you bought it and one t

Napa Valley Wine
Napa Valley Wine Guide: Regions, Grapes & Best Bottles

Napa Valley wine has a reputation problem among some wine drinkers — it’s seen as expensive, obvious, and a bit status-driven. I understand the criticism, but I think it undersells what Napa actually is: one of the world’s great wine regions, producing Cabernet Sauvignon that genuinely rivals anythi

Sparkling Wine
Sparkling Wine Guide: Types, Styles & How to Choose

There’s a persistent myth about sparkling wine: that it’s reserved for toasts, anniversaries, and New Year’s Eve. I find this a shame, because a well-chilled glass of bubbles is one of the most versatile, food-friendly drinks you can pour on a Tuesday afternoon. Sparkling wine pairs beautifully with

Wine and Cheese Pairings
Wine and Cheese Pairing Guide (With Best Combos)

Wine and cheese pairing is one of those combinations that feels almost inevitable — and there’s real science behind it. Both wine and cheese are the result of fermentation, which means they share complementary acids, fats, and flavor compounds that play off each other beautifully. Fat in cheese soft

ALBARIÑO
Albariño Guide: Spain’s Most Exciting White Wine

If you haven’t yet discovered Albariño, you’re in for a treat. This aromatic white grape from the Galicia region of northwestern Spain produces wines that are simultaneously refreshing and complex — a combination that’s rarer than you’d think.

Wine 101: The Fascinating Barolo
Barolo Wine Guide: The King of Italian Reds

“The King of Wines and the Wine of Kings” — it’s a marketing phrase, but for Barolo wine it actually holds up. Made from 100% Nebbiolo in the Langhe hills of Piedmont, northwestern Italy, Barolo is one of the most complex, age-worthy, and frankly captivating red wines produced anywhere on Earth.

Wine 101 The Fascinating Cabernet Franc
Cabernet Franc Guide: Everything You Need to Know

Cabernet Franc is one of the most versatile and underappreciated red grapes in the wine world. While it often plays a supporting role in Bordeaux blends — giving structure and aromatics to wines dominated by Cabernet Sauvignon or Merlot — in the Loire Valley of France it takes center stage, producin

Italian Wine
Italian Wine Guide: Regions, Grapes & Best Bottles

Italy produces more wine than any other country on earth — and it might also produce the most variety. With over 500 officially recognized grape varieties and 20 distinct wine-producing regions, Italian wine can feel overwhelming at first. But that abundance is also what makes it endlessly rewarding

Wine 101 The Fascinating Merlot, Wine and Cheese Pairings
Merlot Guide: Flavor, Regions & Best Bottles

Merlot is one of the most widely planted red wine grapes in the world, and for good reason. It’s approachable, food-friendly, and at its best, strikingly complex. Yet somewhere along the way it picked up an unfair reputation for being “easy” or even boring. I’m here to make the case that Merlot dese

Wine Tannins
Wine Tannins Explained: What They Are & Why They Matter

If you’ve ever taken a sip of red wine and felt a drying, gripping sensation — like the wine was sucking moisture from your cheeks and gums — you’ve experienced wine tannins. Most people notice the effect before they have a word for it. Understanding what wine tannins are, where they come from, and

Wine 101: The Fascinating Moscato
Moscato Wine Guide: Styles, Taste & Best Bottles

Moscato is a wine made from the Muscat grape family — one of the oldest cultivated grapes in the world, with a lineage that traces back thousands of years to ancient Greece and Egypt. The name “Moscato” is Italian, and Italy remains the heartland of the style, though Muscat-based wines are made acro

Wine Subscription
Best Wine Subscription Boxes (2026 Guide)

I’ll be honest — when wine subscriptions first became a thing, I was skeptical. Who needs a box of mystery wines showing up at their door? Then I started paying attention to how my own wine drinking changed when I wasn’t the one choosing everything. I tried bottles I would never have pulled off a sh

Get in touch