Cheese and wine: the best matches | thearticle

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Sometime in the early ‘80s I went on a buying trip to the Loire with my friend Tim Johnston and his wife Stephanie. We went down in his old van and, as usual, cushions were strewn around the


back to make my journey more comfortable. Our first stop was Chavignol. I can’t remember the grower we visited – possibly Alphonse Mellot – to buy some white Sancerre. Then we went to get


some of the famous_ crottin_ (the word means ‘dropping’) goats’ milk cheeses made in the same village, and climbed a hill for a simple but heavenly picnic lunch. I may not have known it


then, but I do now: Sauvignon Blanc likes goats’ milk cheeses best. France and Italy can offer several instances where wine and the local gastronomic speciality are produced within the same


commune. In Italy, in the purlieus of Reggio, Modena and Parma, a hunk of parmigiano reggiano (parmesan) cheese is served with a glass of local lambrusco – a sweet, fizzy red. It is best of


all with a low-strength, sparkling moscato d’Asti, although Daniel Thibaut at Charles Heidsieck used to pair it well with champagne.  In the Alps, a Reblochon might be served with a local


white like an Abymes or an Apremont. In Chablis, the distinguished white wine is paired with the local Epoisses, an absolute stinker of a washed rind cheese (its bark is much worse than its


bite). A red wine might be daunted, but not Chablis. Growing up in Britain and loving the hard cheeses that are still our best, Cheddars, Cheshires and Double Gloucesters, I was happy to eat


them on their own or with a pint of ale. Soft cheeses of the washed rind, or _croûte fleurie_ (camembert, brie) type however, I simply couldn’t consume without wine. In those days Bries and


Camemberts tended to be restricted to restaurants and formal dinners, where they were eaten after the meat. The progression of wines within the meal meant that the wine served with the


cheese would almost certainly be red. Experience has shown that this is not the optimum solution, but no one is likely to want to go back to a dry white after a substantial Bordeaux or


Burgundy.  As far as that other great English cheese, Stilton is concerned, tradition dictates port. Blue cheeses, particularly salty blue cheeses like Roquefort, require sweet wines. The


more salt in the cheese, the more sweetness is needed. Of course, it doesn’t have to be port: a glass of Sauternes makes a nice transition from cheese to Christmas pudding and is quite happy


with both.  So which cheeses actually like red wines? The answer is surprisingly few. In top Bordeaux châteaux ancient tradition would have it that the wines are served with old Dutch


cheeses liked Gouda and Edam peeled from the truckle with an mandoline-type instrument I have seen nowhere else. Hard pressed cheeses of the Comté/Gruyère sort might do as well, as would


Cheddar at a stretch – although some whites would also match them well and might be an improvement. The fruitier the red, the better it will go with soft cheeses; but creamy cheeses can be


more tolerant. I shall never forget my first taste of a ripe triple-cream Brillat-Savarin at the three-star Lameloise restaurant in Burgundy. It was sublime against the aged Burgundy in my


glass.  I was thinking about cheese last week when the KWV cooperative in Paarl in the Cape sent me a collection of the latest releases in their elite Mentors range together with a box of


cheeses from Paxton & Whitfield: a gorgeous soft, ash-coated Loire goat from Selles-sur-Cher; a piece of Brie de Meaux in top condition; and a English Reblochon-style cheese from the


Cotswolds called “Baronet”, that was relatively bland but very creamy. Then there were the hard cheeses: an old, fruity Androuet Comté; a rubbery, smoked Lincolnshire Poacher; a revelatory,


unpasteurised Red Leicester from Sparkenhoe; and a bit of Cropwell Bishop Stilton.  The wines were chiefly red. 2018 Stellenbosch Pinotage; 2018 Stellenbosch Petit Verdot; 2018 Coastal


Region Canvas; 2018 Orchestra – recently voted South Africa’s best wine in the Veritas Awards; and 2018 Paarl Petite Sirah (or Durif). The white was the 2019 Coastal Region Chenin Blanc. 


For the reasons I have explained, I thought the Chenin would have the easiest time of it. It was best with the Comté and not bad with the Stilton – maybe because the latter wasn’t very salty


and the Chenin was a little sweeter than I’d have normally expected. The Pinotage married best to the Red Leicester. I had never met a non-supermarket Red Leicester before and I was


impressed. If the Petit Verdot had a match it was the nutty, creamy Baronet that proved remarkably good with almost all the reds. Syrah accounted for nearly 40 per cent of Canvas, but it put


me in mind of a Rioja. It was slow to come round at the tasting, but filled out a lot. Again, the Baronet was the best match. Orchestra was a tremendous Bordeaux-style wine containing all


six black grapes associated with the region. With its concentration it was not bad with the Baronet either. Lastly the Petite Sirah, produced in tiny quantities and with a creamy black


cherry taste, seemed to hug all the blander hard cheeses well enough. As luck would have it, the next day two whites arrived from Bordeaux with two more cheeses: an English Ragstone goat


made in the style of a Loire-Valley Sainte Maure from Neal’s Yard and a smoked hard-pressed Raclette from the Alps. The whites were 2019 Sauvignon Blanc from Château Bauduc and a mature 2013


Château La Louvière from Pessac-Lèognan. It was no surprise to find that the Bauduc Sauvignon Blanc matched the goat like a dream. I was a little less convinced by the smoked Raclette with


the Louvière. The wine was lovely: all cat on the nose and passion fruit on the palate. When the tasting was finished, the house was full of cheese and some of it was heading down hill. I


was convinced to make an Alpine-style _tartiflette_ with the remains of the bloomy cheeses: Baronet, Brie and Ragstone; that is two layers of potatoes with bacon and onions, separated by,


and normally topped with Reblochon. Ours was mostly Baronet. The dish was very good, and we put out a powerful St Chinian red with 14.5 per cent alcohol to go with it. It was utterly routed


by the dish. Next time I make a _tartiflette_ we will serve a white. A MESSAGE FROM THEARTICLE _We are the only publication that’s committed to covering every angle. We have an important


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