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. 

 

Shrimp Tacos with Provençal Rosé — The Pairing You Didn’t See Coming

Shrimp Tacos with Provençal Rosé — The Pairing You Didn’t See Coming

The pairing seems wrong until the moment you try it.

 

A French wine. A Mexican dish. No geographic connection. No obvious cultural logic. And yet — a chilled glass of dry Provençal rosé next to a plate of shrimp tacos is one of the most naturally coherent pairings I know, because the pairing logic has nothing to do with origin and everything to do with what the food and the wine share at the level of flavour and texture.

 

This is one of the most useful things wine education can give you: the ability to see past the label and ask what is actually happening in the glass. Once you can do that, the world of pairing expands considerably.

 

Why This Works

Three things are happening when you pair a dry Provençal rosé with shrimp tacos.

 

First: the acidity bridges the lime. A properly made Provençal rosé has bright, clean acidity — higher than most red wines, comparable to a good white. Lime juice in the shrimp preparation, in the slaw, and squeezed over the finished taco has the same register. The wine's acidity and the lime's acidity resonate rather than clash. Both become more vivid. The wine tastes fresher; the taco tastes brighter.

 

Second: the saline mineral quality echoes the shrimp. Shrimp is a maritime ingredient — faintly sweet, faintly briny, with a clean oceanic quality when cooked simply. Provençal rosé carries the same note: the limestone terroir and the proximity to the Mediterranean produce a saline mineral finish that reads almost like the sea. When you taste the wine next to the shrimp, both the marine quality in the food and the mineral quality in the wine become more pronounced. They are saying the same thing from different directions.

 

Third: the delicate fruit holds next to the spice without amplifying it. Rosé's low tannins mean it does not amplify capsaicin heat the way a full-bodied red would. The wine's red fruit — strawberry, watermelon — is vivid enough to register next to the bold flavors in the taco without being overwhelmed. And the chilled temperature of the wine provides a physical contrast to any heat in the preparation that itself functions as part of the pairing experience.

 

The Recipe

 

 

 

Shrimp Tacos

Anne Kjellgren
A weeknight shrimp taco built for a dinner party table. Spiced shrimp cook in under four minutes, the lime slaw does as much work as the wine in the pairing, and everything assembles open-face so the layers show. Serve with a chilled Provençal rosé — the acidity bridges the lime, the mineral quality echoes the shrimp, and the result is one of the most naturally coherent food-and-wine pairings you will find outside its own country of origin.
No ratings yet
Prep Time 25 minutes
Cook Time 10 minutes
Making Pickled Jalapenos Ahead 1 day
Course Main Course
Cuisine Mexican
Servings 4 2-3 tacos each

Ingredients
  

The Shrimp

  • 500 g about 1 lb large shrimp — 21/25 count, peeled and deveined, tails removed
  • 2 tablespoons olive oil
  • 3 garlic cloves minced or pressed
  • 1 teaspoon smoked paprika
  • 1 teaspoon ground cumin
  • ½ teaspoon chilli powder
  • ¼ teaspoon cayenne pepper adjust to your heat preference
  • ½ teaspoon dried oregano
  • Zest of 1 lime
  • 1 tablespoon fresh lime juice
  • ¾ teaspoon kosher salt
  • Several grinds of black pepper

The Lime Slaw

  • cups finely shredded red cabbage about ¼ small head
  • ½ cup finely shredded green cabbage
  • 2 tablespoons fresh lime juice about 1 large lime
  • 1 tablespoon apple cider vinegar
  • 1 teaspoon honey or agave
  • 2 tablespoons fresh cilantro roughly chopped
  • ¼ teaspoon kosher salt

The Avocado Crema

  • 1 ripe avocado
  • 3 tablespoons Mexican crema or sour cream
  • 1 tablespoon fresh lime juice
  • 1 small garlic clove minced
  • ¼ teaspoon salt
  • 2 –3 tablespoons water to thin to drizzle consistency

Pickled Jalapeños — from Chili Pepper Madness by Mike Hultquist

  • 6 –8 fresh jalapeños sliced into thin rounds
  • 1 cup white wine vinegar or apple cider vinegar
  • 1 cup water
  • 2 teaspoons kosher salt
  • 1 teaspoon sugar
  • 2 cloves garlic sliced
  • Optional: ½ teaspoon cumin seeds ½ teaspoon black peppercorns, a pinch of dried oregano

Instructions
 

Make the pickled jalapeños the day before (or up to 2 weeks ahead)

  • Recipe by Mike Hultquist, Chili Pepper Madness (chilipeppermadness.com)
  • Combine the vinegar, water, salt, and sugar in a small saucepan over medium heat. Stir until the salt and sugar dissolve completely — about 2 minutes. Remove from heat.
  • Pack the sliced jalapeños and garlic into a clean glass jar. Add the optional cumin seeds, peppercorns, and oregano if using. Pour the hot brine over the jalapeños, making sure they are fully submerged.
  • Allow to cool to room temperature, then seal and refrigerate. They are ready to use after 24 hours and will keep refrigerated for up to 2 weeks. The colour shifts from bright green to olive as they cure — this is normal and the flavor deepens with time.
  • Mike's note: for a quicker version, the jalapeños can be used after just a few hours if you need them same-day, though the full 24 hours produces a more balanced, rounded pickle.
  • Store-bought pickled jalapeños are a perfectly good shortcut if you are making this on short notice — look for a brand with a clean brine and no added sweetener.

To Assemble

  • 8–12 small corn tortillas (5–6 inch) — corn gives more flavour and better texture than flour here
  • 1–2 jalapeños, thinly sliced into rounds (fresh or pickled — pickled preferred for colour and tang)
  • ½ small red onion, very thinly sliced
  • Fresh cilantro leaves — a generous handful
  • 2 limes, cut into wedges for serving
  • Flaky salt for finishing

Optional but Worth It

  • Thinly sliced radishes — 3–4 radishes, paper-thin rounds; adds crunch and a flash of pink
  • A few thin slices of fresh mango or pineapple — the sweetness is unexpected and works well with the spiced shrimp
  • Hot sauce of your choice — alongside, not on top, so people can control their own heat

Notes

For the shrimp: pat completely dry before seasoning — wet shrimp steam rather than sear. Cook in a single layer over high heat without moving for 90 seconds before flipping. A loose C-curl means done; a tight O-curl means overcooked and they will not recover. Pull the pan immediately.
For the slaw: the red cabbage is not optional — it provides both the colour contrast that makes the taco photograph well and the acidity that bridges the wine pairing. Make it at least 15 minutes before assembling; it softens and brightens.
Make-ahead: the pickled jalapeños the day before (or up to 2 weeks ahead), slaw up to 4 hours (add cilantro just before serving), avocado crema up to 2 hours (plastic wrap pressed to the surface). Shrimp marinade no more than 15 minutes — the lime will begin to cure the shrimp and change the texture.

 

Wine Pairing Note

The wine for this dish is a dry Provençal rosé — Côtes de Provence, the most recent vintage you can find, served cold.
The pairing works because the wine and the food share a flavor logic rather than a geographic origin. The rosé's high acidity resonates with the lime throughout the dish — in the slaw, in the crema, in the squeeze over the finished taco. The saline mineral quality in the wine echoes the briny sweetness of the shrimp. The delicate red fruit holds cleanly next to the chili heat without amplifying it — low tannins mean no capsaicin amplification.
Three things happen at once when you eat a bite of taco and taste the wine. The wine tastes fresher because of the lime in the food. The shrimp tastes cleaner because the wine's minerality echoes it. The heat becomes more manageable because the chilled wine provides physical contrast.
Serve the wine at 8–10°C — cold enough that the acidity is precise and the mineral character is vivid, but not so cold that the aromatics close down. Let it warm slightly in the glass as you work through the tacos. By the second glass it will be at its best.
Keyword avocado crema tacos, cast iron shrimp, casual entertaining, Cinco de Mayo, Cinco de Mayo recipe, corn tortilla tacos, Côtes de Provence pairing, dry rosé food pairing, easy shrimp tacos, easy weeknight dinner, French wine Mexican food, lime slaw tacos, pickled jalapeño tacos, Provençal rosé pairing, quick shrimp tacos, rosé wine pairing, shrimp taco recipe with slaw, shrimp taco wine pairing, shrimp tacos, smoked paprika shrimp, spiced shrimp tacos, summer, weeknight dinner, weeknight tacos
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Warm the tortillas directly over a gas flame or in a dry pan — 30 seconds per side. Assemble immediately; everything should be warm (shrimp, tortillas) except the slaw (cool) and the wine (cold). The temperature contrasts are part of the experience.

 

The Wine and How to Serve It

A Côtes de Provence rosé at the $18–25 range is exactly right for this pairing — present, flavourful, and uncomplicated enough to let the food be the main event. Serve it cold, around 46–50°F. Pour it and let it warm slightly in the glass as you eat.

 

The pairing does not require a premium bottle. In fact, a lighter, more affordable Côtes de Provence may outperform a richer, more extracted version here — the delicacy in the wine matches the delicacy in the shrimp.

 

A Note on Timing

Cinco de Mayo is next week — May 5th. If you are hosting or contributing to a celebration and want something beyond the expected Margarita or Mexican beer, this pairing is the conversation starter. A chilled bottle of Provence rosé next to a plate of shrimp tacos is unexpected, immediately understood once tasted, and a genuine talking point.

The lesson: wine pairing is not about matching origins. It is about matching flavor logic. A French wine can belong at a Mexican table if the acidity, the texture, and the character align. They do here.

 

🌶️  A note on the pickled jalapeños: the recipe is Mike Hultquist's, from Chili Pepper Madness — and I want to take a moment to properly introduce you to Mike and his wife Patty.

We met a few years ago at a foodie retreat in the mountains of North Carolina, which is exactly the kind of origin story that makes the internet feel smaller and better than it usually does. Mike is an OG food blogger — he researched and developed everything himself, from the ground up — and what sets him apart is that he builds flavor, not just heat. Deep, layered, considered flavor. Patty is the organizational force and visual talent behind CPM, and one of my favorite people.

If you don't already know Chili Pepper Madness, this is a good reason to go find it. 🌶️ By the way, these jalapenos are pickled in a way that does not overheat the wine - or your palate - big Yay!

 

Be sure to share your shrimp taco and rosé pairing in the community — especially if you try it for Cinco de Mayo. 👉 Click here → Expand Your Palate Community 

 

Patatas Bravas + Southern Rhône Grenache — The Bonus Pairing

Patatas Bravas + Southern Rhône Grenache — The Bonus Pairing

This one is for a Saturday afternoon.

 

A glass of Côtes du Rhône or Gigondas, a plate of patatas bravas warm from the oven, the herbed tomato sauce still faintly hissing. Nothing formal. Just the thing you make when you want something good and you don't want to spend three hours making it.

 

Grenache handles this kind of table easily. It is generous enough to sit next to bold, slightly spicy food without being overwhelmed. Its low tannins mean it does not amplify the heat in the sauce. Its fruit — warm strawberry, red cherry, a little dried herb — complements the tomato's sweetness and acidity without competing.

 

The herbed tomato sauce is doing specific work here: the smoked paprika in the sauce echoes the faintly earthy, warm quality in the Grenache. The olive oil ties the textures together. The herbs — thyme, oregano — return us to the garrigue register the wine already carries.

 

This is not a pairing you need to think about. You need to make the food, pour the wine, and notice that they get along.

 

The Recipe

 

Patatas Bravas (Air-Fryer Method)

Anne Kjellgren
With warmer weather, we take a trip to Spain and its most beloved tapas dish — crispy golden potatoes blanketed in a smoky, garlicky tomato bravas sauce and finished with a drizzle of silky garlic aioli. The air fryer delivers the crunch of deep-frying with a fraction of the oil, making this a surprisingly easy crowd-pleaser. The smoked paprika running through both the potatoes and the sauce creates a natural flavor bridge to the ripe fruit and dried herb character of Southern Rhône Grenache.
No ratings yet
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 25 minutes
Course Appetizer, Side Dish, Tapas
Cuisine Spanish
Servings 4

Ingredients
  

Ingredients — Potatoes:

  • 2 lbs Yukon Gold potatoes cut into 1–1½ inch cubes (no need to peel)
  • 2 tbsp olive oil
  • 1 tsp kosher salt
  • ½ tsp garlic powder
  • ½ tsp smoked paprika

Bravas Sauce (the essential component):

  • 3 tbsp olive oil
  • 4 cloves garlic minced
  • 1 tsp smoked paprika pimentón de la Vera — hot or sweet, or a mix
  • ½ tsp cayenne pepper adjust to taste
  • 1 tbsp sherry vinegar or red wine vinegar
  • 1 cup crushed canned tomatoes
  • ½ tsp sugar
  • Salt to taste

Garlic Aioli (for drizzling):

  • ½ cup good quality mayonnaise
  • 2 cloves garlic finely grated or pressed
  • 1 tbsp fresh lemon juice
  • ½ tsp smoked paprika
  • Salt to taste

Instructions
 

Instructions:

  • Make the bravas sauce: heat olive oil in a small saucepan over medium heat. Add garlic and cook 1 minute until fragrant. Add smoked paprika and cayenne, stirring for 30 seconds. Add crushed tomatoes, sherry vinegar, and sugar. Simmer 10–12 minutes until slightly thickened. Season with salt. Blend until smooth with an immersion blender or transfer to a regular blender. Keep warm.
  • Make the aioli: whisk together mayonnaise, grated garlic, lemon juice, paprika, and salt. Refrigerate until ready to use.
  • Toss potato cubes with olive oil, salt, garlic powder, and smoked paprika until evenly coated.
  • Air-fry at 400°F for 18–22 minutes, shaking the basket halfway through, until potatoes are golden and crispy on the outside and tender inside. Work in batches if needed — do not overcrowd.
  • Transfer hot potatoes to a serving plate. Spoon bravas sauce generously over the top and drizzle with garlic aioli.
  • Serve immediately — patatas bravas wait for no one.

Notes

Wine Note: The smoked paprika in both the potatoes and the sauce is a natural bridge to Grenache's dried herb and white pepper character. The slight heat from the bravas sauce is tamed beautifully by the wine's ripe, generous fruit.
 
This pairing works very well with Southern Rhône Grenache. Here's why: Grenache's ripe red fruit, white pepper, and dried herb character loves the smokiness of paprika-spiced potatoes. The wine's medium tannins and higher alcohol are balanced nicely by the fat in the aioli and cheese.
Keyword patatas bravas, Spanish tapas, air fryer potatoes, bravas sauce, garlic aioli, smoked paprika, Grenache pairing, Southern Rhône, vegetarian, gluten-free, party appetizer, easy entertaining
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The Wine

Côtes du Rhône Rouge at $15–20 is ideal here. The pairing does not demand the complexity of a full Châteauneuf-du-Pape — in fact, a lighter, fruitier expression of Grenache suits the casual register of the food better. Gigondas or Vacqueyras also work, adding a little more structure to meet the sauce's depth.

 

Serve the wine slightly cool — 15–16°C. It will warm in the glass, but starting slightly below room temperature keeps the fruit fresh and prevents the alcohol warmth from amplifying the sauce's heat.

 

This is how you use the wine education: not just for dinner parties and special bottles, but for a Saturday afternoon when the oven is on and the glass is already poured.

 

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Lamb Gyros with Châteauneuf-du-Pape — A Mediterranean Pairing

Lamb Gyros with Châteauneuf-du-Pape — A Mediterranean Pairing

Lamb and Grenache have been paired in the Southern Rhône for as long as both have existed there. The connection is not accidental.

 

Grenache carries garrigue — wild thyme, rosemary, herbs — as a characteristic note. Lamb, when seasoned well, carries the same herbs on its crust and in its fat. The wine and the food share a Mediterranean register so completely that the pairing feels less like a choice and more like recognising something that was always true.

 

 

The gyro format brings the pairing into everyday territory. You do not need a three-hour roast or a special occasion. A lamb gyro — spiced meat, warm pita, cold tzatziki, a little heat from the herbs — is weeknight food that happens to pair perfectly with one of the world's great wines.

 

Why This Works

Three things are happening in this pairing.

 

First: the shared herb register. Oregano, thyme, and rosemary in the lamb seasoning echo the garrigue note in the Grenache. This is flavour bridging — using a shared aromatic to create coherence between food and wine. The wine tastes more itself next to the lamb, not less.

 

Second: the fat meeting the warmth. Lamb fat is rich and savoury. Grenache's low tannins mean it does not grip or clench against the fat; instead, the fat rounds the wine slightly and makes its fruit more present. The warmth of the wine — that almost physical quality Grenache at 14.5% delivers — cuts through the richness without fighting it.

 

Third: the acidity of the tzatziki acting as a bridge. The yogurt's tang provides the acidity that Grenache itself lacks. When you eat a bite of gyro that includes the tzatziki and taste the wine, the yogurt's acid makes the wine feel fresher and more lifted. It is a three-way conversation: herb-forward lamb, cool acidic yogurt, warm Grenache.

 

 

The Recipe

Lamb Gyros with Homemade Tzatziki

Elegant yet weeknight-friendly, these pan-seared lamb loin chops are a natural soulmate for Red Burgundy. A quick sear in a screaming-hot pan creates a beautifully caramelized crust while the interior stays rosy and tender. Fresh rosemary and garlic in the butter baste echo the earthy, herbal notes in the wine, while the lamb's delicate richness aligns perfectly with Pinot Noir's silky tannin structure. On the table in under 25 minutes with minimal cleanup.
No ratings yet
Prep Time 10 minutes
Bring Meat to Room Temperature (30) and Resting Time (5) 35 minutes
Course Entree, Main Course
Cuisine French, Mediterranean
Servings 4

Ingredients
  

Ingredients — Lamb:

  • lbs ground lamb
  • 4 cloves garlic minced
  • 1 tsp dried oregano
  • 1 tsp ground cumin
  • ½ tsp ground coriander
  • ½ tsp smoked paprika
  • ½ tsp cinnamon
  • 1 tsp kosher salt
  • ½ tsp freshly ground black pepper
  • 1 tbsp olive oil

Tzatziki:

  • 1 cup full-fat Greek yogurt
  • 1 small cucumber grated and squeezed very dry in a towel
  • 2 cloves garlic finely minced or grated
  • 1 tbsp fresh dill or mint chopped
  • 1 tbsp fresh lemon juice
  • 1 tbsp good olive oil
  • ½ tsp salt

For Serving:

  • 4 warm pita breads or flatbreads
  • Sliced tomatoes
  • Thinly sliced red onion
  • Fresh parsley leaves
  • Crumbled feta cheese

Instructions
 

Instructions:

  • Make the tzatziki first: combine all tzatziki ingredients, stir well, and refrigerate at least 30 minutes. It improves overnight.
  • Combine ground lamb with all spices, garlic, and olive oil. Mix well with your hands until evenly incorporated.
  • Form into an oval log shape and wrap tightly in plastic wrap. Refrigerate 30 minutes to firm up (this helps it hold together).
  • Option A — Pan Method: Slice the lamb log into ½-inch thick patties. Heat a cast iron skillet over medium-high heat with a drizzle of oil. Cook patties 3–4 minutes per side until well browned and cooked through.
  • Option B — Oven Method: Place the whole lamb log on a foil-lined baking sheet. Roast at 375°F for 30–35 minutes until cooked through. Let rest 10 minutes, then slice thinly.
  • Warm pitas briefly in a dry skillet or directly over a gas flame.
  • Assemble: spread tzatziki generously on warm pita, layer with lamb slices, tomato, red onion, parsley, and feta. Fold and serve.

Notes

Wine Note: The lamb's richness and Mediterranean spices align perfectly with the GSM's garrigue and dark fruit character. The wine's herbal notes echo the oregano and cumin beautifully.
Keyword crostini, mushroom tapenade, olive tapenade, Rhône pairing, GSM pairing, appetizer, entertaining, vegetarian option, make-ahead, easy party food, Provençal, French appetizer
Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

 

The Wine

A mid-range Châteauneuf-du-Pape from a current vintage is ideal — something with 3–5 years of age if you can find it, or open a younger bottle an hour before dinner and let it breathe. The garrigue note will be most present at slightly cool room temperature (16–18°C). Do not serve it too warm.

 

A Gigondas or Vacqueyras also works beautifully here — same Grenache-dominant character, slightly cooler and more structured, and more affordable. If you are introducing someone to the Southern Rhône for the first time, a Gigondas with these gyros is a very good introduction.

 

The bonus pairing on Saturday: patatas bravas with herbed tomato sauce — a looser, more casual pairing that shows the wine's versatility on a different kind of table.

 

Share your lamb and CdP pairing in the community. Expand Your Palate: One Sip At a Time 

 

Syrah & Gouda — The Pairing You Didn’t See Coming

Syrah & Gouda — The Pairing You Didn’t See Coming

This one surprises people.  

The obvious pairings for Northern Rhône Syrah are the bold ones — red meat, game, roasted lamb, anything with enough presence to meet the wine's structure.

These work. They are correct.

But there is a quieter pairing that rewards attention: aged Gouda.  

Not fresh Gouda — the mild, rubbery, easily forgotten version.

Aged Gouda: the kind that has been developing for 18 months to two years or more, turning brittle and amber, developing tyrosine crystals that provide a faint crunch, and deepening into flavors of caramel, butterscotch, and toasted nuts with a long, savory finish.   That savory depth is what creates the connection.

Why This Works

Syrah's signature is not only pepper and dark fruit. Underneath those primary notes is a savory quality — smoked meat, iron, something mineral and dry — that becomes more prominent as the wine ages and opens in the glass.

Aged Gouda carries the same register: nutty, caramel-forward on the surface, with a deeply savory undercurrent that lingers.  

When you put them together, the cheese draws out the savory depth in the wine rather than the fruit. The Syrah's tannins meet the fat and protein in the cheese and soften considerably — that mineral edge rounds out, becoming almost creamy. The caramel in the Gouda makes the wine's dark fruit feel riper and more generous.   It is a pairing that reveals a part of the wine you might not notice otherwise.

What to Look For

The Gouda matters.

Young Gouda (under 12 months) is too mild — it will disappear next to Syrah's structure.

Aged Gouda (18 months minimum, preferably 2 years or older) has the flavor density to hold its place. Look for the amber color and the slight brittleness that signals proper age. Dutch producers such as Beemster (my absolute favorite!) or L'Amuse are reliable; well-sourced options are also available at Trader Joe's and Whole Foods.  

The Syrah: a Crozes-Hermitage with 3–5 years of age is ideal. The fruit will have integrated slightly, the mineral quality will be more present, and the wine will be more comfortable with this kind of food. A Saint-Joseph also works well — slightly more aromatic, slightly softer, very Gouda-friendly.

How to Serve It

Bring the Gouda to room temperature — 30 minutes out of the refrigerator. Cut it into small wedges or irregular pieces rather than slices; the texture is part of the experience.

Open the Syrah 20 minutes before you begin. Pour a small amount, taste it on its own.

Then take a piece of Gouda, let it sit on your tongue for a moment, and taste the wine again.   Notice what changed.   Share your Gouda pairing in the community. 👉 Click here → https://www.facebook.com/groups/expandyourpalate

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Post Created:  Apr 16, 2026