What to Order: Pad Thai, Spicy Thai Food, and Gewurztraminer

What to Order: Pad Thai, Spicy Thai Food, and Gewurztraminer

This week's pairing involves takeout. No recipe, no mise en place, no Dutch oven. You call the restaurant, you pick up the order, you open a bottle of Gewurztraminer, and you learn something about wine pairing that most people never quite believe until they experience it firsthand.

 

 

Spicy food and wine are not natural allies. Most wine — particularly red wine — is made worse by heat. Tannins taste harsh alongside chili. High acidity reads as sharp. The bitterness in certain grapes becomes aggressive when it meets capsaicin. The common advice is to drink beer with spicy food, and for most wine, that advice is correct.

 

Gewurztraminer is the exception. It is one of the handful of wines — off-dry Riesling is another, Viognier a third — where the characteristics of the grape actually improve in the presence of heat. Understanding why makes the pairing feel less like a lucky accident and more like something you can replicate intentionally across cuisines.

 

The Chemistry, Briefly

Three things happen when you drink wine alongside spicy food. First, capsaicin — the compound responsible for chili heat — amplifies the perception of tannin and acidity on the palate, making tannic reds taste harsh and high-acid whites taste sharp. Second, sweetness or the perception of sweetness moderates capsaicin — it literally reduces the sensation of heat. Third, fat in the mouth (from coconut milk, from peanut oil, from the proteins in the dish) softens everything and makes the wine's texture more prominent.

 

Gewurztraminer addresses all three simultaneously. It has essentially no tannin (it's a white wine). Its acidity is soft — low enough that capsaicin does not amplify it into sharpness. Its fruit concentration is high enough to read as lush and slightly sweet even in a technically dry bottle, which moderates the heat. And its aromatic intensity — lychee, rose petal, ginger, spice — is in direct conversation with the lemongrass, galangal, and kaffir lime that define Thai cooking.

 

The result is a pairing where both things improve. The food tastes less aggressive. The wine tastes more complete. That is the sign of a pairing that is working.

 

 

What to Order

Pad Thai is the anchor dish for this pairing — and if you are ordering one thing to demonstrate the logic, this is it. The sweet-savory-sour balance of tamarind, fish sauce, and palm sugar, the richness of egg and peanut, the heat from dried chili flakes, and the freshness of lime and bean sprouts create a complex flavor profile that Gewurztraminer meets at almost every point. The lychee and ginger in the wine echo the sweet-spiced character of the sauce. The soft acidity does not fight the tamarind. The body holds up against the richness of peanut and egg.

 

Photographically, Pad Thai is also the most striking dish on a Thai menu — the noodles give texture and height, the garnishes (lime wedge, crushed peanuts, fresh bean sprouts, a scatter of scallion) give color contrast, and the warm orange-gold of the dish mirrors the deep gold of Gewurztraminer in the glass. If you are going to set the bottle and the bowl side by side, this is the pairing that photographs.

 

Green curry is the second choice. The coconut milk base softens the heat and creates a creamy richness that Gewurztraminer's body can accompany. The lemongrass and kaffir lime in the curry echo the wine's floral-citrus aromatics. Order it at medium heat — very high heat in a curry will push even Gewurztraminer toward its limits.

 

Tom kha gai (coconut soup with galangal and lemongrass) is arguably the best pairing on the menu if it's available. The aromatic base of the soup — galangal, lemongrass, kaffir lime — is in almost perfect alignment with the wine's own aromatic profile. The coconut softens the acidity. The result is seamless in a way that feels remarkable for a wine-and-takeout pairing.

 

Spring rolls and dumplings with a dipping sauce work well as starters alongside Gewurztraminer — the mild richness of the wrapper and the savory-sweet filling are a natural fit.

 

What to Avoid Ordering

Very sour dishes — som tum (green papaya salad) in its more acidic versions can make the wine read as flabby. The salad's acidity overwhelms Gewurztraminer's relatively soft acid structure.

 

Extremely high heat — if you order very hot (5-star heat at most Thai restaurants), the capsaicin level will push past what any wine handles gracefully. Moderate heat — 2 or 3 stars — gives the wine the best chance to show what it does.

 

What to Drink

A dry or lightly off-dry Alsatian Gewurztraminer is the first choice. Entry-level bottles in the $18–25 range from a reliable producer deliver the full aromatic profile — lychee, rose petal, ginger — without the richness of a VT expression that would be too much for a casual takeout meal.

 

Serve it cool — around 10°C. It will warm slightly in the glass over the meal, which is fine; the aromatics open as the temperature rises toward 12–13°C. Do not serve it cold-cold, straight from the fridge, where the aromatics close down and you lose the quality that makes the pairing work.

 

Join the conversation — and tell us what you ordered — in our community: Expand Your Palate: One Sip at a Time. 

 

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Post Created:  May 21, 2026

The Aromatic Whites of Alsace: A Framework for Everything We’ve Covered

The Aromatic Whites of Alsace: A Framework for Everything We’ve Covered

Three weeks is a long time to spend in one region. It is also, for Alsace, barely enough.

What we have now, after Riesling and the different sweetness levels, the Pinots, SGN, and Gewurztraminer, is a working framework — a set of reference points that lets you walk into a wine shop, find the Alsatian section, and make a deliberate choice rather than a guess. That is the goal of these three weeks. Not memorization. A framework.

Here it is, as plainly as possible.

 

The Four Noble Whites — When to Reach for Each

 

Pinot Blanc — reach for it when the occasion is simple and the food is mild. Aperitif service. Light first courses. Mild cheese. Any moment when you want a pleasant, food-friendly white that does not call attention to itself. Best value in the Alsatian lineup. If you are new to the region and want an entry point that will not challenge or polarize, start here.

Riesling — reach for it when precision matters. When you want the wine to cut through richness, when the food has mineral or acidic notes that a more generous wine would blur, when you are tasting deliberately and want something that rewards attention. Also the grape to seek out when you want to explore the sweetness spectrum — from bone-dry to SGN, Riesling covers more ground than any other Alsatian variety.

Pinot Gris — reach for it when dinner is rich and substantial. Roasted pork, duck, mushroom-forward dishes, aged cheese, anything with fat and depth. The fullest-bodied dry white in the Alsatian lineup. Remember: not Pinot Grigio. The name is similar; the wine is not.

Gewurztraminer — reach for it when the food is aromatic and complex. Spicy Thai, Indian curry, Moroccan tagine, Chinese aromatic preparations. Also for Alsatian classics: Munster cheese, foie gras, tarte flambée. The most distinctive aromatic profile of any white wine grape — lychee, rose petal, candied ginger — and the most polarizing. People tend to love it or find it too much. The only way to know which side you are on is to try it.

 

The Sweetness Overlay

All four noble varieties can appear as Vendange Tardive or Sélection de Grains Nobles. The sweetness spectrum runs across the entire region, not just Riesling. When buying, the same rules apply: look at the producer's style, check the back label for residual sugar if it's printed, and when in doubt ask your wine merchant.

For everyday drinking and food pairing, dry expressions of all four grapes are the starting point. The VT and SGN versions are for specific occasions — and they are worth knowing.

 

The Blend: A Note on Edelzwicker and Gentil

Something I have been tasting alongside this three-week arc: an Alsatian white blend.

Edelzwicker — the traditional Alsatian blend — is made from two or more of the region's varieties, and it is historically the wine of everyday Alsatian life. The noble varieties in a blend behave differently than they do alone: the Riesling's acidity structures the Gewurztraminer's generosity; the Pinot Blanc's softness rounds the whole thing. What you often get is a wine that is more immediately accessible than any of the individual components at the same price, and more interesting than its humility suggests.

 

Gentil (the regulated version of Edelzwicker, requiring at least 50% noble varieties) is where the style becomes genuinely worth seeking out. A good Gentil is one of the best-value Alsatian whites in a shop.

 

What to Take From Three Weeks in Alsace

The region rewards the investment of time in a way that a single week cannot demonstrate. Spending three weeks with it — following the grapes from the clean precision of Riesling through the richness of Pinot Gris to the extravagance of Gewurztraminer — gives you a map of what white wine can be across a wide range.

 

It also gives you a set of purchases you can make with genuine intention. When you see an Alsatian Riesling on a restaurant wine list, you now know what it is and what food it belongs alongside. When you see Gewurztraminer and the menu has a Thai-spiced dish, you know why that works. When a wine merchant recommends an Alsatian Pinot Gris with the rich braise you're planning, you understand why they're right.

 

That is the only goal. Not expertise. Not memorization. A framework that makes the next purchase a little more deliberate.

 

The aromatic whites of Alsace are now part of yours.

 

Join the conversation: Expand Your Palate: One Sip at a Time 

 

Gewurztraminer: The Grape That Announces Itself

Gewurztraminer: The Grape That Announces Itself

Most wines, tasted blind, require a moment. You swirl, you smell, you consider. Sauvignon Blanc could be Pinot Grigio. Chardonnay could be Viognier. Riesling is distinctive, but it takes practice.

 

Gewurztraminer does not require a moment. You smell it and you know.

 

The lychee note alone is essentially diagnostic — no other widely-grown grape variety produces that specific aromatic compound (geraniol) in the same concentration. Add the rose petal, the candied ginger, the orange blossom, and the faint spiced warmth underneath, and you have a fingerprint that is, among major wine grapes, genuinely unique.

 

That distinctiveness is both the grape's greatest gift and its most commonly cited limitation. Gewurztraminer is a strong personality. It is not a wine for every occasion. But for the occasions it suits — and they are more numerous than its reputation suggests — it is irreplaceable.

 

In the Glass

Color: deep gold, sometimes with a faint copper or amber tinge. Noticeably deeper than Riesling or Pinot Gris at the same stage of development. If you line up the four Alsatian noble whites, Gewurztraminer is the darkest by a visible margin.

 

On the nose: lychee first, almost always. Then rose petal — not floral in a generic sense but specifically rose, the kind that arrives before you've quite registered why. Candied ginger. Orange blossom. Sometimes a faint smokiness or musk underneath. The aromatics are layered, rich, and persistent. They do not fade quickly.

 

On the palate: full body, soft acidity, and a texture that is lush without being heavy. The finish is long and spiced. Even a technically dry Gewurztraminer can feel round and generous because the fruit concentration is so high. Alcohol tends to run 13.5–14.5% — on the higher end for white wine, which contributes to the sense of warmth and body.

 

What it does not have: the bright, cutting acidity of Riesling. The neutral lightness of Pinot Blanc. The savory earthiness of aged Pinot Gris. Gewurztraminer is its own thing, playing by its own rules.

 

Dry vs. Off-Dry: The Same Question as Riesling

As with Riesling, Gewurztraminer in Alsace runs a sweetness spectrum — from dry through Vendange Tardive to the extravagant Sélection de Grains Nobles. The same label-reading logic applies: the base Alsace AOC designation tells you nothing specific about sweetness, and the producer's house style is the most reliable guide.

 

Dry Gewurztraminer is the most versatile at the dinner table. The fruit richness and soft acidity already make it feel generous; residual sugar in a VT or SGN expression pushes the wine toward specific, more ceremonial pairings — foie gras, blue cheese, or simply by itself after a meal.

 

For the Thai food pairing on Thursday, a dry or very lightly off-dry Gewurztraminer is the right choice: you want the aromatic intensity and the soft acidity without so much sweetness that the wine starts reading as a dessert wine at the table.

 

How Gewurztraminer Differs from Its Alsatian Siblings

Having spent two weeks with Riesling and the Pinots, the contrast is useful.

 

  • Riesling vs. Gewurztraminer: Riesling is precise, mineral, high-acid. Gewurztraminer is lush, perfumed, soft-acid. Both are aromatic, but in fundamentally different registers — Riesling's aromatics are clean and citrus-driven; Gewurztraminer's are rich and floral-spiced.
  • Pinot Gris vs. Gewurztraminer: The closest siblings in terms of body and texture, but Pinot Gris's aromatics are restrained by comparison — smoked stone fruit and spice versus Gewurztraminer's full floral-tropical declaration. Pinot Gris is the better food neutral; Gewurztraminer is the better match when the food itself is aromatic and complex.
  • Pinot Blanc vs. Gewurztraminer: No contest in terms of intensity. Pinot Blanc is gentle and accommodating. Gewurztraminer is neither. They serve entirely different functions at the table.

 

What to Pair With It

The Thai food pairing — this Thursday's post — is the most immediately striking demonstration of what Gewurztraminer does. But the grape's pairing range is wider than that single example suggests.

 

  • Spicy cuisines: Thai, Indian (particularly aromatic curries and kormas), Moroccan, Vietnamese. The soft acidity and lush fruit handle heat; the aromatics echo the spice.
  • Alsatian cuisine: Munster cheese (the washed-rind regional classic), tarte flambée, choucroute garnie, foie gras. The regional pairing logic holds.
  • Chinese: Dim sum, Cantonese, aromatic preparations with ginger and five-spice.
  • Soft and washed-rind cheeses: Munster, Taleggio, Époisses. The lush fruit and soft acidity work well against the pungency.
  • Avoid: Very lean, delicate fish (the wine overwhelms), bitter greens, and highly acidic dishes (the wine's low acidity reads as flabby next to high-acid food).

 

How to Buy

Entry ($15–22): Accessible and food-friendly. A reliable Alsatian producer at this price point delivers the full aromatic profile — lychee, rose, ginger — in a form ready to open and drink tonight.

 

Mid-range ($22–40): Single-producer, terroir-specific. The aromatic complexity deepens; the texture becomes more interesting. Worth the step up for a deliberate pairing.

 

Vendange Tardive ($45–80+): Off-dry to sweet, concentrated, extraordinary. Try alongside foie gras or Munster cheese for the full Alsatian experience.

 

Read the companion post: The Aromatic Whites of Alsace — A Framework for Everything We've Covered 

 

Join the conversation: Expand Your Palate: One Sip at a Time

 

Gewurztraminer and the Close of the Alsace Arc

Gewurztraminer and the Close of the Alsace Arc

Three weeks ago, we arrived in Alsace knowing it mostly by reputation — the tall green bottles, the German grape names on French labels, the dry Riesling that smells almost sweet but isn't. We have spent time with Riesling and its seven levels of sweetness. We have cooked with it. We have explored the Pinots — Blanc for the everyday table, Gris for the rich and substantial dinner. We have tasted the Sélection de Grains Nobles and understood why it exists.

 

This week we close the arc with the grape that is, in many ways, the most Alsatian of all: Gewurztraminer.

 

 

It is not a subtle wine. It does not try to be. Gewurztraminer announces itself — a rush of lychee, rose petal, candied ginger, and something almost spiced that has no single name. It is the most immediately recognizable aromatic white in the world, and it divides people cleanly: some find it captivating, some find it overwhelming, almost everyone has a strong reaction. Neutrality is not available.

 

That dramatic quality, which can make Gewurztraminer seem difficult to place at the table, turns out to be exactly what makes it one of the finest pairings for spicy food anywhere in the wine world. Thursday's post is built around that discovery — specifically, around a takeout order of Pad Thai and the wines that make spice make sense.

 

What Gewurztraminer Is

Gewurztraminer is a pink-skinned grape — you can see it in the vineyard, the clusters a warm bronze-pink rather than the green of Riesling or Pinot Blanc. The name in German means roughly "spiced traminer," a reference to the grape's ancestry in the Traminer variety and the spiced, aromatic quality of the wine it produces. It is grown across a number of wine regions, but Alsace is where it reaches its most complete expression: fullest body, deepest color, most concentrated aromatics.

 

 

In Alsace, Gewurztraminer is typically fermented to dryness or near-dryness — but the sugar levels at harvest are so high that even a dry Gewurztraminer has a texture that reads as lush, almost rich. The acidity is moderate and soft. The alcohol is often 13.5–14.5%, higher than most whites. The overall impression in the glass is one of fullness and generosity: a wine that gives a great deal of itself immediately, without reserve.

 

This is both its appeal and, for some drinkers, its limitation. Gewurztraminer is not a wine for moments that require subtlety. It is a wine for moments that can accommodate — and reward — presence.

 

What It Tastes Like

The aromatics are the entry point and they are distinctive enough that, once you have smelled Alsatian Gewurztraminer, you will recognize it again. Lychee is the most commonly cited note — the fresh, perfumed tropical fruit that the wine resembles in a way that is not casual but almost chemical. Rose petal. Candied ginger. Orange blossom. Sometimes a faint smokiness underneath, sometimes something almost nutty in older examples.

 

 

In the glass the color is deeper than any other Alsatian white — deep gold, sometimes with a faint copper or amber hue. The body is full. The finish is long and spiced.

 

On the palate, the sweetness question follows the same logic as last week's Riesling discussion: Gewurztraminer in Alsace is usually dry or very close to it, but the fruit concentration can make it taste sweeter than the residual sugar number suggests. Vendange Tardive Gewurztraminer — late harvest — is genuinely off-dry to sweet and is one of the great luxuries in Alsatian wine. SGN Gewurztraminer is the flamboyant far end of the spectrum: an extravagant, perfumed, intensely sweet wine for rare occasions.

 

Why Gewurztraminer and Spicy Food

The logic is straightforward once you understand it, and it applies not just to Thai food but to any cuisine where heat, aromatics, and complexity come together: Indian, Moroccan, Vietnamese, certain Chinese preparations.

 

 

Spice — the heat from chili — amplifies tannin and acidity on the palate. A tannic red alongside a spicy dish will taste harsh, the tannins exaggerated by the heat. A high-acid white will taste sharp. What spicy food needs is a wine with low tannin (check — it's a white), soft acidity (check — Gewurztraminer's acidity is gentle relative to Riesling), and some residual sweetness or apparent fruit sweetness to counterbalance the heat. Gewurztraminer, with its lush fruit, soft acidity, and occasional trace of residual sugar, delivers all three.

 

The aromatic dimension adds another layer. Thai cooking — lemongrass, galangal, kaffir lime, fresh ginger, coconut — is built on a perfumed, layered aromatic base that is unusual among world cuisines. Gewurztraminer's own aromatic complexity echoes it. They do not clash because they speak a similar language: both are about layered fragrance rather than straightforward flavor.

 

The result is a pairing that feels almost designed — which, in the sense that both the grape and the cuisine evolved in places that favor aromatic intensity, perhaps it is.

 

The Alsace Arc, Complete

Three weeks in one region is unusual in this curriculum. Most regions get one week. Alsace has earned three because it is genuinely complex — the sweetness spectrum alone required a full post to untangle, and the grape range from Pinot Blanc to Gewurztraminer covers nearly the full width of what dry white wine can be.

 

What we have now is a framework. Pinot Blanc for the everyday table. Pinot Gris for rich, substantial food. Riesling for precision and aging and the full spectrum of sweetness. Gewurztraminer for aromatic intensity and spiced food. And SGN — in whichever grape it comes from — for the rare occasion that calls for something extraordinary.

 

Tuesday's second post brings this together as a framework you can carry into any wine shop. It also includes a note on the Alsatian white blend — the Edelzwicker or Gentil style — as the expression that shows what happens when these grapes share a bottle.

 

Thursday: Pad Thai, green curry, and the wine that handles heat better than almost anything. It involves takeout. It involves Gewurztraminer in the glass. And it is one of the more immediately convincing demonstrations of what wine pairing can do when you choose the right bottle.

 

Join the conversation in our community: Expand Your Palate: One Sip at a Time.