Roast Lamb & Burgundy Pinot Noir: Your Easter Table, Planned

Roast Lamb & Burgundy Pinot Noir: Your Easter Table, Planned

Easter Sunday is in three days.

 

If you are planning a roast lamb, today is the day to think about what goes in the glass alongside it. Not because wine is the point of Easter, but because the right bottle — opened at the right temperature, poured at the right moment — makes the meal feel considered rather than assembled. And this particular pairing is one that has been making sense at spring tables for a very long time.

Roast lamb and Burgundy Pinot Noir. Here is why it works, what to buy, and exactly how to serve it.

 

Why This Pairing Works

The tannin and fat relationship. Lamb is moderately fatty — not as rich as beef, not as lean as veal. It needs a wine with enough structure to cut through the fat and refresh the palate, but not so much tannin that it fights the meat. Pinot Noir's fine, silky tannins are exactly right. They do the work without the aggression.

 

The acidity and richness balance. Burgundy Pinot Noir's high acidity — a defining characteristic of the grape and the region — functions as a natural counterpoint to the richness of the roast. Each sip refreshes the palate and makes the next bite of lamb taste more vivid.

 

The earthiness affinity. Good Burgundy Pinot Noir has an earthy, savoury quality — what becomes forest floor and mushroom in aged examples. Lamb, particularly when roasted with rosemary, garlic, and thyme, has a similar savoury depth. The wine and the meat find each other in that register.

 

The weight is right. Pinot Noir is medium-bodied. Roast lamb is medium-weighted as a protein. A full-bodied Cabernet Sauvignon can overwhelm lamb's relative delicacy. Pinot Noir sits in the right relationship with the meat — substantial enough to hold its own, restrained enough not to dominate.

 

How to Prepare the Lamb

Simple preparations work best with Burgundy Pinot Noir. The wine is doing nuanced work and does not benefit from competing with heavy sauces or very bold spicing.

 

Rack of lamb. More elegant, quicker cooking, appropriate for a smaller table. A herb crust — parsley, thyme, mustard — works beautifully. The Chambolle-Musigny floral character in a good Pinot Noir complements the herb crust particularly well.

 

 

Roast Lamb Loin Chops

A minimalist preparation that lets both the lamb and the wine do the talking — exactly right for Red Burgundy. A simple herb and lemon zest rub, a hard sear for crust, and a quick finish in the oven is all this dish needs. No sauce, no distractions. The lamb's natural richness plays beautifully against Pinot Noir's acidity, while rosemary and thyme echo the earthy, herbal notes that define grea
No ratings yet
Prep Time 40 minutes
Cook Time 15 minutes
Resting Time 10 minutes
Course Entree, Main Course
Cuisine French, Mediterranean

Ingredients
  

  • 8 lamb loin chops 1–1½ inches thick
  • 2 tbsp olive oil
  • 4 cloves garlic lightly crushed
  • 1 tbsp fresh rosemary finely chopped
  • 1 tbsp fresh thyme leaves
  • Zest of 1 lemon
  • 1 to 1½ tsp kosher salt
  • 1 tsp freshly ground black pepper

Instructions
 

Prep & Season

  • In a bowl, combine:
  • Olive oil
  • Garlic
  • Rosemary
  • Thyme
  • Lemon zest
  • Salt & pepper
  • Rub evenly over the lamb chops.
  • Let sit at room temperature for 20–30 minutes.

Preheat

  • Preheat oven to 400°F (205°C)
  • Heat a heavy skillet (cast iron preferred) over medium-high heat

Sear the Lamb

  • Add chops to hot pan
  • Sear 2–3 minutes per side until a deep golden crust forms

Finish in Oven

  • Transfer skillet to oven
  • Roast for 5–8 minutes
  • Target doneness:
  • Medium-rare: 130–135°F (54–57°C)
  • Medium: 135–140°F (57–60°C)

Rest

  • Remove from oven
  • Rest 5–10 minutes before serving

Notes

🔥 Pro Tips (Simple but critical)

  • Pat lamb dry before searing → better crust
  • Don’t overcrowd the pan → you want sear, not steam
  • Use fresh herbs only → dried will flatten the dish
  • Slice against the grain if serving carved → better texture

 

🍷 Why This Works with Burgundy Pinot Noir

This stripped-down version is actually ideal:
  • Lamb’s natural richness → complements Pinot’s acidity
  • Rosemary & thyme → echo earthy, herbal Burgundy notes
  • Garlic (lightly used) → adds depth without dominating
  • Lemon zest → lifts the dish and highlights the wine’s brightness
No heavy sauce = the wine stays the star.
Keyword lamb loin chops, roasted lamb, rosemary thyme lamb, minimalist lamb, Red Burgundy pairing, Pinot Noir pairing, gluten-free, dairy-free, elegant entertaining, date night, oven finish, cast iron
Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

Leg of lamb, bone-in, roasted. The classic. Stud with garlic, coat with rosemary and olive oil, roast to a pink centre. The herbs — rosemary especially — have an herbal quality that resonates with Pinot Noir's subtle vegetal notes. Rest thoroughly before carving.

 

Slow-roasted shoulder. More forgiving, more rustic, extraordinary depth of flavour from long cooking. This richness calls for a slightly more structured Pinot Noir — a Mercurey or a Nuits-Saint-Georges rather than a lighter Givry.

 

Accompaniments that work: Roasted root vegetables, white beans, spring peas, flageolet beans (the classic French accompaniment to lamb), gratin dauphinois. Spring herbs throughout.

 

Avoid: Very heavily spiced preparations (North African-style with a lot of warm spice), mint sauce in large quantities, or very acidic sauces. These will work against the wine's delicate character.

 

What to Buy — Today

For most Easter tables, a Mercurey or Givry in the $25–40 range is exactly right. These are honest Burgundy Pinot Noirs with enough character to be interesting and enough approachability to be drunk young, tonight, without ceremony. A village-level Côte de Nuits — Nuits-Saint-Georges, Chambolle-Musigny — at $45–70 is worth the investment if the occasion calls for something more considered.

 

What to avoid: very young Côte de Nuits Premier Cru or Grand Cru wines that need time to open. If you have access to something aged five to ten years, that is a different and wonderful conversation. If you are buying new, stay with Chalonnaise or village-level Côte de Nuits.

 

How to Serve It

Serve at 60–65°F — slightly below room temperature in most homes. Burgundy Pinot Noir served too warm becomes flat and loses its defining freshness; served too cold, the fruit closes and the tannins seem harsh. Fifteen minutes in the refrigerator from a normal room temperature is usually sufficient.

 

Decant for thirty minutes. Even a young, accessible Mercurey opens significantly with air — the fruit becomes more expressive, the earthiness more apparent, the texture smoother. A simple decanter or even a jug will do.

 

Open a second bottle without guilt. Pinot Noir at the Easter table is meant to be poured generously.

 

From everyone at the Food Wine and Flavor table: joyeuses Pâques. Happy Easter.

 

Share your Easter table in our community. 👉 Click here → Expand Your Palate Community

 

Coming next week: the Rhône Valley. A completely different world from Burgundy — bigger, warmer, more dramatic. The amazing and affordable wines the French buy and enjoy. We spent four days in Châteauneuf-du-Pape and drove the full valley. That story begins Sunday.

 

Gamay & the St. Patrick’s Day Table: Plan Ahead

Gamay & the St. Patrick’s Day Table: Plan Ahead

St. Patrick’s Day is next week.

 

If you are planning a corned beef dinner, a Reuben sandwich, a Reuben casserole, or simply a gathering that calls for something better than whatever green beer has been volunteered — this post is for you. And it is arriving Thursday on purpose: you need a few days to find the wine.

 

The wine is Beaujolais. Specifically, a Beaujolais Cru — one of the ten named villages in the northern part of the appellation where Gamay, grown on granite and schist soils, produces something considerably more interesting than most people expect.

 

Here’s why it works, and what to buy before the holiday.

 

Why Gamay at a St. Patrick’s Day Table

The food at a St. Patrick’s Day table — corned beef, cabbage, Reuben sandwiches, braised meats, root vegetables — shares a set of characteristics that make wine pairing surprisingly specific. The dishes tend to be:

 

  • Salty — corned beef is brine-cured; the Reuben adds sauerkraut and Swiss
  • Fatty — braised meats and rich sandwich builds carry significant fat
  • Acidic — sauerkraut, mustard, and cabbage bring brightness and tang
  • Savoury — the umami depth of slow-cooked meat, caraway, and fermented things

 

A high-tannin wine — Cabernet Sauvignon, Malbec, big Syrah — will clash with the salt and the sauerkraut’s acidity, making the tannins taste bitter and the food taste metallic. A thin, sweet wine will disappear beside the richness.

 

Gamay, with its low tannins, high acidity, and bright fruit, navigates all of this cleanly. The acidity matches the acidity in the food. The low tannins do not fight the salt. The fruit provides contrast to the savoury depth. The wine is light enough not to overwhelm cabbage and carrots, structured enough to stand beside corned beef.

 

It is, practically speaking, one of the most food-compatible red wines you can pour at a celebration table that includes several different dishes.

 

The Reuben, Specifically

A Reuben is a study in contrasts: salty corned beef or pastrami, tangy sauerkraut, creamy Swiss cheese, the slight sweetness of Russian or Thousand Island dressing, the toasted bread. It is a lot happening at once.

Gamay’s high acidity acts as a palate cleanser between bites — the same function that sparkling water serves, but with considerably more pleasure. The wine’s cherry and raspberry fruit provides a clean counterpoint to the richness of the meat and cheese without competing with the tangy notes of the sauerkraut. The low tannins mean nothing in the wine fights the salt.

A Brouilly or Fleurie — the fruitier, more approachable Crus — works particularly well here. Save the more structured Morgon or Moulin-à-Vent for the corned beef dinner, where the food has enough weight to meet the wine’s greater depth.

 

photograph of a Rueben sandwich cut in half and open-faced. Dark rye bread and piles of sliced corned beef, sauerkraut, swiss cheese and Russian dressing dripping down to the wood board.

Rueben Sandwich

Enjoy 🍀 St. Patrick's Day Feature + Classic Lyonnaise Pairing
5 from 1 vote
Course Main Course
Cuisine American, Irish

Ingredients
  

Ingredients:

  • 8 slices marble or dark rye bread
  • 1 lb deli-sliced corned beef
  • 8 slices Swiss cheese
  • 1 cup sauerkraut lightly squeezed dry in paper towels
  • ½ cup Russian dressing recipe below or bottled
  • 4 tbsp unsalted butter room temperature

Russian Dressing (Quick Homemade):

  • ½ cup mayonnaise
  • 2 tbsp ketchup
  • 1 tbsp prepared horseradish
  • 1 tsp Worcestershire sauce
  • ½ tsp smoked paprika
  • Salt and pepper to taste

Instructions
 

Instructions:

  • Mix all Russian dressing ingredients together and refrigerate until ready to use.
  • Lay out bread slices and spread Russian dressing generously on one side of each slice.
  • Layer corned beef, Swiss cheese, and sauerkraut on four of the slices. Top with remaining bread, dressing side down.
  • Butter the outside of each sandwich on both sides.
  • Heat a skillet or griddle over medium heat. Cook sandwiches 3–4 minutes per side, pressing gently with a spatula, until bread is golden and cheese is melted.
  • Slice diagonally and serve immediately.

Notes

About the Wine: Beaujolais Cru (Morgon, Fleurie, Moulin-à-Vent, Brouilly) offers bright acidity, low tannins, and red fruit character. Reach for Morgon or Régnié for the Reuben — their earthiness mirrors the umami of cured beef beautifully.
Can't find those crus specifically, no worries, the acidity of the sauerkraut and dressing is tamed beautifully by a Beaujolais Cru's bright fruit, while the wine's low tannins won't clash with the briny corned beef.
Keyword Corned Beef, Rye, Sandwich, Sauerkraut
Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

 

The Corned Beef Dinner

A traditional corned beef and cabbage dinner is gentler on wine than the Reuben — more savoury than salty, the vegetables providing freshness, the meat tender and mild from its long braise. A Morgon or Moulin-à-Vent with a few years of age is excellent here: the wine’s earthiness echoes the savoury depth of the meat, the acidity lifts what could otherwise be a heavy plate, and the structure holds through a long, leisurely meal.

 

If you are serving a Reuben casserole — the layered, baked version — the richness increases and a slightly more structured Cru becomes the better choice.

 

What to Buy and Where to Find It

Beaujolais Crus are increasingly available at well-stocked wine shops and online retailers. The names to look for on the label: Brouilly, Fleurie, Morgon, Moulin-à-Vent, Chiroubles, Régnié, Saint-Amour, Julienas, Chenas, Côte de Brouilly. Any of the ten will serve the St. Patrick’s Day table well.

 

Budget $18 to $35 for a Cru that will genuinely impress. At Total Wine, Wine.com, or your local independent wine shop, tell them: “I’m looking for a Beaujolais Cru, not Nouveau — something from Morgon or Brouilly if you have it.” That sentence will get you exactly what you need.

 

The Planning Principle

Holiday wine pairings reward a small amount of advance thought. The wine that works best for your St. Patrick’s Day table is not the bottle you grab on the way to the party — it is the one you pick up this weekend, having spent five minutes with a framework that tells you what to look for.

 

This is what wine education is for. Not the memorisation of appellations or the performance of expertise — but the practical ability to arrive at any table with the right bottle and the quiet satisfaction of knowing why it works.

 

Làinte. Cheers. Share what you pour in our community. [LINK]

 

Sláinte.

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Post Created:  Mar 12, 2026